The ELFA Project


Studying in English as a Lingua Franca (SELF)

On this page you can find:

 

Description of the SELF project

English has become the global lingua franca of the academic world. English is the principal language of research publication, and the number of English-medium degree programmes has risen steeply. In these contexts, English is overwhelmingly used among non-native speakers. Its main role is a lingua franca, a contact language among speakers who do not share a mother tongue.

The accelerated mobility and global use of English expose the language to an unprecedented wealth of contacts with other languages and thereby potentially rapid change. To capture the changes in English as they are taking place and to understand the processes involved, we need to document uses of English as it undergoes these transformations.

Project SELF sets out to provide research-based evidence on present-day English as a lingua franca (ELF), with a focus on academic discourses in university settings. Academia has been one of the prime domains to adopt English as its lingua franca, and provides a fruitful context for exploring new developments in English: it is a demanding, verbally oriented and influential domain of language use.

SELF focuses on English-medium university studies, adopting a microanalytic, ethnographically influenced perspective on the social contexts of ELF, tapping the speakers' experience along with their language. As a large-scale sounding board for its linguistic analysis, the research utilises the one-million-word ELFA Corpus. A combination of the corpus-based and the discourse analytic approaches seeks to achieve a well-rounded understanding of current ELF usage.

Findings from the SELF project serve theoretical and descriptive interests on issues of language change and new developments in English. In addition, they serve important applications, primarily in university contexts for the benefit of students and teachers in English-medium programmes. To this end, we co-operate with the Helsinki University Language Centre (click here to go to their project Language Support for English-Medium Master's Programmes). We also expect to contribute to wider applications to teaching, translation and interpretation.

The project is funded by the University of Helsinki Funds for three years (2008–2010).

 

Poster

Click below to download the SELF project poster. The poster was presented by Niina Hynninen at the Professionalising Multilingualism in Higher Education conference in Luxembourg, 4–6 Feb 2010.

 

Current research

PhD students

Ray Carey is to start his PhD work soon, topic TBA.

Henrik Hakala is doing his PhD on accent accommodation in ELF interaction. His data come from an English-medium programme at a vocational institution. Working title: Accent Accommodation in ELF Speech: How and Why?

Niina Hynninen focuses on language regulation in ELF. Her data from English-medium university courses include interrelated speech events and interviews. Working title: Language Regulation in a Lingua Franca.

Diane Pilkinton-Pihko explores ELF lecturers' self-assesments of their language use at the Aalto University School of Science. Working title: English as a Lingua Franca Lecturers’ Self-Assessments of Their Language Use.

Jaana Suviniitty focuses on interactional features of lecturing in an English-medium programme at the Aalto University School of Chemical Technology. Working title: It Ain’t How You Say It, It’s What You Say – A Student-perspective on Lectures in English as a Lingua Franca.

MA students

Netta Hirvensalo is analysing teacher interviews with focus on higher education language policy.

Pirjo Surakka-Cooper uses SELF research data to explore features of written ELF.

Postdoc research

Anna Solin conducts post-doc research on the academic portfolio genre.

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Publications

Publications related to the SELF project can be found under Publications.

 

Documents

News

  • The compilation of a database of written academic ELF (WrELFA) has started! Read more here!
  • The ELFA Text Corpus is now available for research! Read more here!
  • Check out Journal of Pragmatics (2011, Vol. 43, No. 4) for recent research on ELF
  • Now published: Helsinki English Studies Special Issue on English as a Lingua Franca!
  • New project on Global English (GlobE) continues the ELF theme
  • Check out English for Specific Purposes (2010, Vol. 29, No. 3) for recent research on ELF
  • ELF Forum 2008 thematic volume published: English as a Lingua Franca: Studies and Findings edited by Mauranen A. & Ranta E. → go to publisher's site