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English Teaching and Learning in Ethnic Minority Regions in China: Challenges and Opportunities

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Perspectives on Teaching and Learning English Literacy in China

Part of the book series: Multilingual Education ((MULT,volume 3))

Abstract

Provision of English for ethnic minority pupils in China has become more common since the turn of the century. This is primarily due to a series of policy documents issued in 2001 by the central education authorities to promote English language education in the country. Recent literature on English provision for minority groups paints a largely gloomy picture of the new phenomenon. There appears to be a consensus that minority students are now facing the daunting task of learning L3, usually English, in addition to the challenge of learning L2, Mandarin Chinese. This chapter focuses on the challenges faced by ethnic minorities in China in learning English. Given the usually unfavourable conditions minority groups are in with regard to geography, economy and social status, minority students seem to experience various cognitive and affective problems and thus are inevitably further marginalized. In some recent studies, however, researchers have found that instead of being further disadvantaged many minority students see the new challenge of learning L3 as an opportunity for empowerment. The author of this chapter provides a holistic and balanced review of this new phenomenon and makes some suggestions for further research.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Some groups, such as the Yao nationality in Guangxi and the Ewenki in Inner Mongolia, speak three languages often on a daily basis: their own ethnic minority language (L1), the dominant minority language used in the region (L2), and Mandarin Chinese (3). When the pupils face the task of learning English, Duoyu Jiantong (multilingualism) and Duoyu Jiaoyu (multilingual education) have become the logical educational aim. In this chapter, however, for the sake of brevity, we use trilingualism and trilingual education to refer to the use, teaching, and learning of languages by all minority groups, including the minority language(s) they speak, Mandarin Chinese (L2), and a foreign language, usually English (L3).

  2. 2.

    According to Teng (2000a, b), Chinese is used as the medium for teaching and Yi as a school subject (he calls this Model 2) in schools in Zone 1 which consists of metropolitan areas where Chinese is the dominant language for daily use. The capital city of the Prefecture, Xichang, and other major towns fall into this zone. In isolated, mountainous areas in Liangshan—Zone 3 where Yi is used for communication—Yi is often used as the teaching medium and Chinese a school subject (Model 1). In Zone 2 with mixed communities of Chinese and Yi language speakers, both Chinese and Yi are used in daily interactions, and schools adopt either Model 1 or Model 2.

  3. 3.

    Minority students educated in schools where Han Chinese is the teaching medium are called Min Kao Han students. At present, the Min Kao Han system co-exists with the Min Kao Min system where minority students are educated in their mother tongue from primary school onwards, with Chinese only as a school subject. The two parallel systems are found in autonomous regions, such as Tibet and Xinjiang.

  4. 4.

    Preferential policies can be categorised into two major types for the purpose of this chapter: those for the students of ethnic minorities and those for the students defined as special and honored citizens. According to Li (2010), the “special and honoured citizen” group include “three good” students honored at the provincial or city level, children of cadres in poor areas, children of revolutionary martyrs, and children of families in which the mother in child-bearing age gave birth to two females and then had her oviduct legated (the last category may sound most bizarre to English readers, but not to a Chinese audience. It is apparently a measure to enhance the family planning policy in the countryside where families are allowed to have two children. Since most families long for a son, despite the strict policy, some families don’t stop reproducing if they get two daughters. Hence, central or local governments have taken other measures such as this to enhance their family planning policies). The policies of both types have been controversial, but this chapter focuses only on those for minority students.

  5. 5.

    Threshold theory developed by Cummins (1976) refers essentially to bilingual children’s age-appropriate level in L1 and/or L2 to determine whether bilingualism has a detrimental or positive effect on the children.

  6. 6.

    Recently, a multi-case study project to investigate trilingualism and trilingual education has been carried out in nine minority regions in China since 2009 (Feng 2010). This project aims, first of all, to gain a holistic understanding of language education and language use in these minority regions. Interested readers can contact the author for further information about this project.

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Feng, A. (2012). English Teaching and Learning in Ethnic Minority Regions in China: Challenges and Opportunities. In: Ruan, J., Leung, C. (eds) Perspectives on Teaching and Learning English Literacy in China. Multilingual Education, vol 3. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-4994-8_9

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