Kamhi-Stein, Lia D. (Ed.) (2004).
Learning and Teaching from Experience: Perspectives on
Nonnative English Speaking Professionals. Ann Arbor, MI: The
University of Michigan Press.
Pp.ix+345.
ISBN 0-472-08998-6
Reviewed by Samer Annous
University of Balamand, Lebanon
August 28, 2005
Learning and Teaching from Experience:
Perspectives on Nonnative English Speaking Professionals is a
collection of essays written in four sections: Theoretical
underpinning, focus on research, focus on teacher preparation and
focus on the classroom. The book combines theory and practice and
adds a valuable contribution to the growing literature on
non-native English speaking teachers (NNESTs).
In Chapter 1, George Braine sets the historical
background of the non-native English speaking
professionals’ movement and its representation in the TESOL
caucus. Braine, himself an editor of a similar book,
Non-native Educators in English Language Teaching (1999),
offers a detailed summary of the diverse research on non-native
speaker issues. Thus his chapter lays the basic theoretical
foundations of the terminology being used throughout the book.
Chapter 1 is followed by two personal narratives that discuss the
‘non-native’ identity. In section two of the book,
four research studies that deal with multiple contexts varying
from adult education to kindergarten are presented. Following
both quantitative and qualitative designs, the research studies
look at both teachers’ and students’ perceptions of
the non-native issues in ELT. Section three, which consists of
five chapters, discusses teacher preparation programmes in the
US. The authors offer both theory and practice and call for the
inclusion of non-native issues in the teacher training programmes
in order to pave the way for the success of non-native speaking
teachers of English. Section four focuses on the effects of the
native-non-native dichotomy on the ESL and EFL classroom. By
providing examples of successful collaborative projects, the
authors in this section call for the collaboration between NNESTs
and NESTs.
The book engages readers from different
backgrounds: TESL/TEFL students, ESL/EFL teachers, and ELT
administrators. With discussion questions after each chapter, the
book serves as an ideal textbook for emerging courses in ELT
methodology and the native/non-native dichotomy in teacher
preparation and training. ESL/EFL professionals might use this
book as a source of empowerment and as a proof for their
competence. On the other hand, this book gives the ELT
administrators evidence that nonnative teachers can be as
professionals as natives and that the so-called differences are
in fact a source of enrichment to the language classroom. Similar
to Medgyes’ work (1994), the book calls for the
collaboration between natives and nonnatives.
Unlike the works of Medgyes (1994) and Braine
(1999), this book doesn't attack ‘linguistic
imperialism’ (Phillipson, 1992) and doesn’t take an
ideological stand regarding the ‘idealisation of the Native
Speaker’. The book follows a celebrative line, in which it
introduces the readers to the success stories of non-native
professionals in addition to research that supports their
professionalism and the contributions they make to the ELT
profession. By doing that, the book empowers non-native speaking
professionals and rejoices their teaching achievements. The 29
authors, both natives and non-natives, from different teaching
backgrounds, speak, with confident voices, with high self-esteem
and with no inferiority complex, about their accomplishments and
report empirical studies to support their professionalism. The
confident voices of these authors stem from the fact that the
majority of them have been involved in founding the caucus for
nonnative English- speakers in TESOL and thus being politically
active in promoting the professional image of NNESTs .
Although Kamhi-Stein’s book is a basic
addition to literature on the native/non-native dichotomy in
English language teaching, it has one major problem. The book is
basically written with an ESL background although the editor
claims that some chapters are written with an EFL audience in
mind. All the research studies that the book presents were
conducted in ESL contexts (mainly the United States). In
addition, the book doesn't contain any article or research study
that discusses the discriminatory attitudes against nonnative
professionals in EFL contexts (where the majority of nonnative
professionals exist). My main concern is that while this book
celebrates the success stories of non-native English speaking
professionals, it draws a rosy picture, in which novice readers
or EFL practitioners might think that NNEST are not victims of
discriminatory employment policies that affect their identity and
professional status (Annous, 2004). Failing to address the
discriminatory attitudes (in both ESL and EFL contexts) and their
effects on the lives of teachers weakens the theoretical
foundations of the book and limits its horizons to the field of
teaching English methodology.
Despite these limitations, Kamhi-Stein is
offering the readers a valuable set of articles that deal with a
controversial issue in ELT both in ESL and EFL contexts. The book
is an excellent documentation of the success stories of nonnative
English-speaking professionals in the hope that, as Kamhi-Stein
states in the introduction to the book, it will ‘increase
the understanding about this group of professionals, who have
only recently become more vocal and visible’ (p. 6).
References
Annous, S. (2004). The Status of Non-native
Teachers of English in Lebanon, Unpublished Institution
Focused Study, Institute of Education, University of London.
Braine, G. (1999). Non-native Educators in
English Language Teaching. London: LEA.
Medgyes, P. (1994). The Non-native Teacher. London:
MacMillan.
Phillipson, R. (1992). Linguistic Imperialism. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
About the Reviewer
SamerAnnous, a doctoral candidate
in Education at the School of Culture, Language and
Communication, Institute of Education, University of London. He
has been a full-time instructor of English at the University of
Balamand, Lebanon since 1998.
Copyright is retained by the first or sole author,
who grants right of first publication to the Education Review.
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