Research shows that English fluency in India mobilises access to socio-economic and cultural capital. Unequal access to education in India renders the work of Non-Government Organisations (NGOs) to be essential to providing basic education for all. Disadvantaged Indian children are sometimes taught English (rather than their Mother Tongue) on the assumption that early English learning will improve later life chances. Drawing on data from early childhood teachers working in an NGO for children living in slum communities, we use a postcolonial lens to explore how NGOs can critically engage with English language privilege whilst supporting children to have improved opportunities and outcomes – such that English language learning is more than a...
A recent consequence of the positioning of English as the pre-eminent language of international comm...
This study sheds light on the difficulties of English teaching and learning in the Government School...
"Little kids are like sponges," goes the saying. While young children are commonly believed to be na...
Research shows that English fluency in India mobilises access to socio-economic and cultural capital...
Internet and globalisation have ensured English of its place as the most sought-after language the w...
This dissertation is an ethnography of aspirational mobilities emergent under contexts of profound m...
Discourses of development, as well as popular understandings, hold that access to education in Engli...
A key question facing education policymakers in many emerging economies is whether to promote the lo...
This dissertation is a study of English language and literacy in the multilingual Indian context, un...
This article reports on a critical qualitative case study of an EMI-based, underresourced public sch...
This paper is an attempt to understand and analyse the language learning experiences of a child from...
This thesis explores the history behind the growth of English as a lingua franca in India by focusin...
Abstract This article gives an account of how English spread and gained the status of a global langu...
This study reports on an investigation into the perspectives of different stakeholders (e.g. adminis...
The English language has now become lingua franca, which means the language that bridges the globe a...
A recent consequence of the positioning of English as the pre-eminent language of international comm...
This study sheds light on the difficulties of English teaching and learning in the Government School...
"Little kids are like sponges," goes the saying. While young children are commonly believed to be na...
Research shows that English fluency in India mobilises access to socio-economic and cultural capital...
Internet and globalisation have ensured English of its place as the most sought-after language the w...
This dissertation is an ethnography of aspirational mobilities emergent under contexts of profound m...
Discourses of development, as well as popular understandings, hold that access to education in Engli...
A key question facing education policymakers in many emerging economies is whether to promote the lo...
This dissertation is a study of English language and literacy in the multilingual Indian context, un...
This article reports on a critical qualitative case study of an EMI-based, underresourced public sch...
This paper is an attempt to understand and analyse the language learning experiences of a child from...
This thesis explores the history behind the growth of English as a lingua franca in India by focusin...
Abstract This article gives an account of how English spread and gained the status of a global langu...
This study reports on an investigation into the perspectives of different stakeholders (e.g. adminis...
The English language has now become lingua franca, which means the language that bridges the globe a...
A recent consequence of the positioning of English as the pre-eminent language of international comm...
This study sheds light on the difficulties of English teaching and learning in the Government School...
"Little kids are like sponges," goes the saying. While young children are commonly believed to be na...