English Language essay topics

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  • Essay As The English Language
    1,029 words
    The role of the English language in Richard Rodriguez's Gains and Losses The essay Gains and Losses by Richard Rodriguez deals with one of the most important and controversial questions in American society what is the role of the English language in the United States and throughout the rest of the world As one finishes this essay, though, one might be left with an additional, and possibly quite different question what role should the English language play in the United States and throughout the ...
  • English As The Official Language
    651 words
    The Need for an Official Language Language is the most important media in human communication. It makes it much easier to exchange ideas. Imagine if everyone in this society spoke his own language. What would our society looks like? Probably not as prosperous as what we are now because business is very difficult to do due to the fact that all documents have to be printed in different languages. Our whole society would be split up because there is no communication between each other. The fact tha...
  • Instruction In The Student's Second Language
    1,714 words
    Bilingual Education in the northeastern United States and Canada serves many advantages and benefits for students of limited English skills. Since the early sixty's, it continues to serve a great advantage to foreign students. This is important because it gives these students the opportunity to achieve the American Dream. American educators have argued that the aim of education should be to assimilate a foreign student into the American mainstream, become good American citizens, and not keep the...
  • Change In The English Language
    851 words
    EBONICS Ebonics, also known as Black English, is a nonstandard dialect spoken in many homes in the inner cities of America. This nonstandard language is often looked upon as low-class or lazy talk. This is not the case, however. Due to consistencies found in the dialect, there seems to be an order. It has been found that, when learning English, African-Americans adapted the language using some of the structure and rules of their own native tongue. This Black English has carried on through slaver...
  • Bilingual Education And English Immersion Programs
    2,122 words
    What is Best For the Children The controversial debate over English immersion and bilingual education programs has effects in almost every school system. Advocates of bilingual education believe that it is necessary for children to be instructed in their native tongue and gradually be introduced to English or else they may fall behind in school. Supporters of English immersion say that bilingual education programs hinder the learning process of the English language, thus retarding the learning p...
  • Learning Of The English Language
    1,163 words
    Bilingualism has had a bad rap lately. Prop 227, the Un Initiative, successfully passed removing bilingual education from California schools replacing it with English immersion. For some reason, Americans feel that only one language is necessary and that language is English only. Although the general consensus is to remove any form of bilingualism in this country, research has shown that being bilingual is not bad but is actually a good trait to have. Bilingualism is defined as people who use tw...
  • Difference In The Sound Of Language
    548 words
    The frequent situations of misunderstandings in intercultural communication may be more common then one may believe. The potential for misunderstandings between two different cultures communicating is very high. Through such things as idioms, translation errors, and wrong body language communicative skills can be incorrect. When these intercultural mistakes occur between the people speaking or moving it may be perceived by the opposite culture as funny, rude or confusing. With these consideratio...
  • English The Official Language
    1,677 words
    The term stranger is hard to define. By definition, the stranger is not only an outsider but also someone different and personally known. (Parillo, 7) This definition could pertain to many people. One such group of people are the Hispanic Americans. Hispanic Americans are the ethnic group that attracts the most public attention. Hispanics are the largest ethnic group in the United States; however, they are often viewed as strangers in society. The main reason for this belief is because of Spanis...
  • Sixteenth Century The Use Of London English
    1,798 words
    Standardization of the English Language There are several important events before 1500 that when listed together show a series of steps in the struggle for English language supremacy. These steps are mainly governmental, legal and official events that pushed English usage. In 1356 The Sheriff's Court in London and Middlesex were conducted in English for the first time. When Parliament opened in 1362 the Statute of Pleading was issued declaring English as a language of the courts as well as of Pa...
  • Lep Children For English Language Classrooms
    1,615 words
    The result of California election on June 4th, 1998 was predicted all along. Proposition 227, also known as the anti-bilingual education measure, won in 61% favorable to 39% unfavorable contest. In a seemingly routine contest, the proposition brought out one of the most disparaging groups of supporters and critics, displaying passion for their causes in rallies, forums, debates and TV ads. This paper examines proposition 227 and its controversy. Then, it proposes what might have been a compromis...
  • Learning The English Language
    709 words
    The Limitations of Language The 14th Amendment in the United States Constitution dictates that any citizen of the United States shall receive the equal protection of civil rights, with due process of the law and cannot be discriminated against based upon race, origin, sex, class or political affiliation. Thus, educational policy in the United States is focused on providing the equal opportunities for all students. One heated debate in American education policy making is the use of bilingual educ...
  • French And English As Official Canadian Languages
    1,019 words
    The conflict in Canada between the people who speak French and those who speak English can trace its roots to Colonial times. Since Canada was originally a French colony, the majority of the people originally spoke French. In 1760, during the French Indian War, England gained control of Canada. This led to a large number of English speaking settlers who eventually became more numerous that the original French speaking settlers. Two distinct cultural groups evolved the French, mostly in Quebec, a...
  • English Language
    2,002 words
    The Importance and Difficulty of Teaching EnglishByJeffrey Dobson Period 36/1/00 Part 1: The Importance of English "In the world were over seven thousand languages have, one language had become dominate. This dominant language is English."In the majority of countries throughout the world speak English as their second or first language, no longer just America or England". English has taken many forms, American English, the Queen's English, Australian, Canadian English, and several others. Even Am...
  • Shakespeare's Ability To Mold The English Language
    613 words
    The English language has been in constant transition throughout its history, but the most significant transformation in modern English can be credited to William Shakespeare. With Shakespeare's invention of commonly used expressions, his creation of new words, and his use of iambic pentameter, he was able to affect the language in a way that no person since has. Shakespeare's influence on modern English is not only visible in everyday speech, but also in the fact that his work has survived over ...
  • American Dictionary Of The English Language
    1,078 words
    Noah Webster, familiar to most Americans as the writer of the first American dictionary, worked as a schoolteacher in the late eighteenth century. As he taught, he came to realize that there were some major problems with the way English was taught in the American schools. The United States of America had recently declared its independence from England, and was struggling to form its own identity. The schools were still using textbooks from England, and these books varied in consistency when it c...
  • English As Their First Language
    694 words
    America is a nation filled with all different types of people. People of different color, languages, traditions, and dreams. Because we are a nation of immigrants, we do not share the characteristics of 'race, religion, ethnicity, or native language {that} form the common bonds of society in other countries' (Exploring Language 252). However, by agreeing to learn and use just one single language we have been able to unite many different people and create an incredibly diverse population. Yet, wh...
  • English The Official American Language
    2,056 words
    Should, English be the only language? That is a question that is argued over frequently, especially in the United States. Hayakawa supports that English being declared our official language can do no harm, stating this, "While it is certainly true that our love of freedom and our devotion to democratic principles help to unite and give us a mutual purpose, it is English, our common language, that enables us to discuss our views and allows us to maintain a well informed electorate... ". (Hayakawa...
  • Chinese And English
    285 words
    I am chinese education, so that my English is not good. I am already is a college student. I have a big problem is on my English. I am very difficult to communicate with my classmate and all my assignment and exam cann not write in better. I am very difficult to give my idea in property English. It like a children's essay. I am very feel shame about that. How i got to do in my English? i can remember all the rule of grammer, but i do not know how to use it and when to use it is proper. i always ...
  • Standard Language Ideology For English
    2,604 words
    With the fast-paced globalization and technological development, the world is stepping into the era of informational ism. It is characterized by the advances in computing technology and the global network of telecommunications, in which English is! SS selected!" as the lingua franca (common communicative language). Subsequently, the demand for learning English as the second language (ESL) or the foreign language (EFL) keeps growing into the past few decades. English is turning to an internationa...
  • English Language Empowerment Act
    1,332 words
    America And The English Language Essay, Research America And The English Language America and the English Language To what degree do the words you use define the person you are? This is a central question in the hotly debated issue of making English the official language of the United States. If English did become the official language, the rights of people who do not speak English would be violated and the nation would be further segregated. Just as schools were segregated in our past, this aga...

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