Taboo topics in the ESL/EFL Classroom in the Gulf Region

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Abstract

Many English teachers, having little knowledge in the area of Islam, arrive from around the world to teach in the rich oil and gas region of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) with its burgeoning youthful population and intense K-12 educational reform. Critical pedagogy, a relatively new trend in teaching methodologies in the Arab world, focuses on praxis that relates classroom content (micro level) to real life issues (macro level).Yet, many current event topics, such as the Arab Spring and AIDS, and other subjects that are prohibited in Islam, such as the consumption of alcohol and pork, are considered inappropriate for the classroom. This chapter examines taboo topics in Gulf Arab Muslim teaching contexts. Some recommendations for what is appropriate and what is not appropriate to discuss and teach about in Gulf Arab Muslim ESL/EFL classrooms are made. Educators are encouraged to teach using critical pedagogy, but discouraged from teaching target-language cultural values that may conflict with students' values, because this could impede language development by creating cognitive dissonance. The purpose of this chapter is to inform teachers new to the region or teachers thinking of entering employment in the region about topics that may be considered inappropriate for classroom language teaching in the GCC countries.

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Gobert, M. (2015). Taboo topics in the ESL/EFL Classroom in the Gulf Region. In Intercultural Communication with Arabs: Studies in Educational, Professional and Societal Contexts (pp. 109–126). Springer Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-287-254-8_7

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