Text V, for questions from 29 through 33.
1 In recent literature, the concept of the ideal teacher
has gained some notoriety, especially in relation to the native
English-speaking teacher (NEST) / non-native
4 English-speaking teacher (non-NEST) dichotomy. It appears
that the glory once attached to the NEST has faded, and an
increasing number of English language teaching experts
7 assert that the ideal teacher is no longer a category reserved
for NESTs. It is becoming a generally accepted view that
outstanding teachers cannot be squeezed into any
10 pigeonhole: all outstanding teachers are ideal in their own
ways, and as such are different from each other. The concept
of ideal teacher resists clear-cut definitions, because there
13 are too many variables to consider.
In order to get a better grasp of the ideal teacher,
however, let us suppose that all the variables are kept
16 constant momentarily, except for the language proficiency
component. In relation to non-NESTs, the question arises:
Does somebody with a better command of English stand a
19 better chance of becoming an ideal teacher? In other words:
Is a more proficient speaker a more efficient teacher as well?
All other things being equal, the answer is yes: the ideal
22 non-NEST is someone who has achieved near-native
proficiency in English. The importance of this attribute is
seldom questioned in the literature. Britten (1985) claims that
25 have an excellent command of English is a major selection
criterion and a good predictor of a non-NEST’s professional
success. Lange (1990) rates language proficiency as the
28 most essential characteristic of a good language teacher, and
Murdoch (1994) calls it the bedrock of the non-NEST’s
professional confidence. Liu’s (1999) study conducted among
31 non-native TESOL students at a university in the United
States confirms that English-language proficiency is generally
recognized as a make-or-break requirement in English as
Second Language environments as well. Therefore, it must
be a valid claim that the most important professional duty that
non-NESTs have to perform is to make linguistic
37 improvements in their English.
Péter Medgye. When the Teacher Is a Non-native Speaker. In: Celce-
Murcia (ed.) Teaching English as a Second or Foreign
Language. Heinle&Heinle, 2001, p. 440 (adapted).
Choose the correct alternative based on the fragment below:
“It is becoming a generally accepted view that outstanding teachers cannot be squeezed into any pigeonhole…”