The future of english

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Abstract

This article begins with a brief résumé of three selected texts which have, in different ways, been influential in setting the agenda for thinking about the long-term future of English. Discussions held at the 1999 NATE conference in a ‘Future of English’ commission were a response to a challenge by Gunther Kress (1995) to try to say what English is for. The working definitions which were achieved are used as a basis for beginning to consider, rather more briefly and tentatively, how the content of English should be defined, what progression would look like in the proposed curriculum, how it should be assessed and what the implications would be for teachers. Finally, the article puts forward some suggestions for a strategy which would aim to ensure that the challenge for a radical review of the English curriculum is addressed in time for 2005. © 2000 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Hodges, G. C., Moss, J., & Shreeve, A. (2000). The future of english. English in Education, 34(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1754-8845.2000.tb00566.x

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