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The future of Arabic teaching in British universities. James Dickins University of Leeds Sept. 2, 2010. 1. Arabic teaching up to c.1968. Elite subject: Cambridge: since 1632 Edinburgh: since1750 Classical language Began in Cambridge as adjunct to theology
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The future of Arabic teaching in British universities James Dickins University of Leeds Sept. 2, 2010
1. Arabic teaching up to c.1968 • Elite subject: • Cambridge: since 1632 • Edinburgh: since1750 • Classical language • Began in Cambridge as adjunct to theology • Subsequently adjunct to Greek and Latin • Grammar-translation method • Modern literary Arabic (Cowan 1958) • A new Arabic grammar of the written language (Haywood and Nahmad 1962)
2. Standard Arabic teaching: c.1968-1995 • Some broadening beyond elite universities: • Cambridge, Oxford, SOAS, Exeter, Manchester, Leeds, Durham, Edinburgh, St. Andrews • But also: Heriot-Watt, Salford • Standard Arabic as a classical and modern language • Introduction of modern Arabic elements at various universities • From 1970s, Leeds focuses on Modern Standard Arabic • Elementary Modern Standard Arabic (Abboudet al. 1968) • communicative approach (within formal grammatical framework) • use of taped materials, presenting Arabic as explicitly spoken language • now unfashionable audio-lingual method
3. Colloquial Arabic teaching to c.1995 • No significant presence in British universities • Colonial period • Sudan as an example: • Sudanese grammar (Worsely 1925) • Sudan Arabic: An English-Arabic vocabulary (Hillelson 1930) • Sudan Arabic texts (Hillelson 1935) • Sudanese Colloquial Arabic (Trimingham 1946) • 1960s-1970s: Georgetown grammars and dictionaries • A short reference grammar of Moroccan Arabic (Harrell 1962) • A dictionary of Syrian Arabic: English-Arabic (Stowassser 1964) • A reference grammar of Egyptian Arabic (Abdel-Massih et al. 1979) • Post-Georgetown • Lots!
4. Arabic teaching since c.1995 (2000): 1 • Student numbers • 1990s: slight fall • Since 2000: massive increase (2000-2003: 50%) • Student composition • Experienced language learners • Interest in Islam / the Middle East • Interest in Arabic (e.g. time spent in Arab world) • Students of Arab background. • Students of non-Arab Islamic backgrounds • Broadening of universities • E.g. UCLAN launched full Arabic degree in 2009
5. Arabic teaching since c.1995 (2000): 2 • Broadening of curriculum to include Colloquial Arabic • Communicative approach to Standard Arabic: al-Kitaab fi ta‘allum al-‘arabiyya (al-Batal et al. 1995; 2nd edn. 2004) • audio materials • video materials • computer materials • Cf. also: • Mastering Arabic (Wightwick and Gaafar, 1990; 2nd edn. 2007) • audio materials • Standard Arabic: an advanced course (Dickins and Watson 1999) • audio materials (but otherwise more traditional)
6. Integration of Standard and Colloquial Arabic • Teach Standard and Colloquial separately • most universities, with Colloquial typically introduced after students have begun to learn Standard Arabic • Teach Standard and Colloquial in tandem, but for different domains • University of Cambridge • Centre for Advanced Study of Arab World (CASAW: Edinburgh) • Standard Arabic used for written-based activities, and Colloquial for spoken-based activities including talk about texts written in Standard Arabic. • Teach Standard and Colloquial mixed together • Typically through the use of a version of Arabic considered to be the language of highly educated people in formal spoken situations (e.g Formal spoken Arabic; Ryding 1990)
7. Demand for Arabic • Students • Experienced language learners • Interest in Islam / the Middle East • Interest in Arabic (e.g. time spent in Arab world) • Students of Arab background. • Students of non-Arab Islamic backgrounds • Employers • Non-government: • Commercial (needing translation, etc.) • NHS, law (needing interpreters, etc.) • Arab press (esp. London-based) • Cultural organisations • Human rights organisations • Government: • Foreign Office • GCHQ • Military
8. New types of learners • Speakers of Arabic at home • E.g. second generation British Arabs • School learners of Arabic • In 2005: • 2,183 people took GCSE Arabic (up 63% from 2001) • 429 people took A-Level Arabic (up 64% from 2002) • People with specialist interests • E.g. religious Classical Arabic
9. New technology: computers and the internet • Edinburgh/CASAW e-learning project (Mourad Diouri) • Open University • Blended learning introductory Arabic project (2007): funding not currently available
10. Summary and prospects: 1 • Different types of degree courses: • full BAs • joint honours BAs • Minor element of BAs • UWLP/IWLP modules • Postgraduate (MA, etc.) courses • New types of degree programmes • Arabic-intensive • Translation • Interpreting • Specialist interests • Colloquial Arabic focus • Classical Arabic (e.g. religious Arabic)
11. Summary and prospects: 2 • New types of funding: • Specialist institution funding: CASAW • Direct government bursaries? • New types of institution • elite universities • non-elite universities • Open University • New types of student • native/near-native speakers of Arabic • no previous language-learning experience • New teaching techniques • blended learning