Speakers – Allen S. Mackenzie
Alan S. Mackenzie
Alan S. Mackenzie is a Director at TransformELT. He is celebrating his 30th year in ELT, 25 of which were spent in Asia in teaching, training and project management. Recently, he has been involved in projects in Bangladesh, Kazakhstan, Greece, Sri Lanka, Kuwait and the UK. He is a project designer, manager, and monitoring and evaluation specialist. As a trainer, he has worked with CLIL teachers from Spain, Switzerland, Italy, France, and Poland; teacher trainers from Uzbekistan, and China, and has managed large-scale ELT development projects in India, Pakistan and Thailand. He has evaluated projects in higher education in Spain, and Bangladesh and basic education in Kazakhstan, Bangladesh, and India. He is module leader for the NILE MA module in Developing Learner Autonomy.
Plenary: Minding the gaps: Global trends in language education and the race to keep up
Around the world, education systems are putting more emphasis on the learning of languages. Rationales generally cite access to and participation in the global economy. The rise of services as an industrial sector puts emphasis on language ability and soft skills as essential for employment and many education systems are racing to change to meet the ever increasing demand for more and higher linguistically skilled workers. However, within this landscape of language education development a number of gaps hinder positive change. This presentation will explore the top ten gaps: from policy, through industry to teaching practices, development funding and project management. After describing each gap and the reasons for it, ideas to close those gaps will be sought from the audience before presenting key examples of how different education systems are trying to close them.
The main gaps are:
- Employer expectations vs. Education system aims and products
- Education system aims vs. assessment systems
- Assessment system aims vs. actual assessment tools used
- Teacher development: training & funding vs. project commissioning and management
- Perceptions of English native vs. non-native teacher skills
- teacher skills vs. Content language Integration: CLIL/EMI
- Plurilingualism in the EU, Asean vs. mono/ pseudo bilingualism in UK (state of MFL, status of EAL)
- Technology: What is available vs. how it is used. Past- linguistic ubiquity. Present -online learning. Future – universal translators?
- Competency frameworks and quality standards vs. actual performance
- Lack of research in key areas: Trainer competence, learning impact assessment