Want to speak English like a native speaker? Read this first.

Mr Henriquez
Language Learners Toolkit
5 min readOct 21, 2022

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Language learners, and English language learners in particular, always want to achieve language proficiency as good as native speakers. There are many videos on YouTube and articles on Medium with titles like “How to speak English as a native speaker” or “how to achieve native speaker proficiency levels”. You’ve probably clicked on this article for the same reason. However, we need to talk about this native speaker thing.

Photo by Antenna on Unsplash

Native-speakerism: discriminating within the field of ELT?

There is a notion in the field of English language teaching (ELT) called ‘native-speakerism’, which is the idea that “native-speaker teachers represent a ‘Western culture’ from which spring the ideals both of the English language and of English language teaching methodology” (Holliday, 2006).

The idea that non-native-speaker teachers are poorer teachers compared to native-speaker teachers is posited by those who feel native speakers have a somewhat divine right to teach “their” language.

As such, native-speakerism seeps through everything ELT related: from the teachers to the variety of English that is taught. Some believe the latter is a reminiscence of colonialism and the idea that inner-circle countries such as the US, the UK, and Australia own English.

Holliday (2017) goes even further and labels native-speakerism as a racist practice, albeit based on critical sociology, and some research shows that in the world of ELT, being perceived as a native-speaker teacher is linked to being white and Western-looking (Kiczkowiak & Lowe, 2021).

The fact remains, however, that native-speakerism paves the way for discrimination towards non-native-speaker teachers, who might be rejected because they are non-native speakers.

The situation in China

Learners and non-native English speakers prefer native speakers as teachers over non-native speakers. As discovered by Wang & Fong (2020), Chinese EFL learners regarded native-speaker teachers and their standard English as the best model for learning.

These Chinese students also felt that the native English speakers’ classes were more energetic, fun, and…

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Language Learners Toolkit
Language Learners Toolkit

Published in Language Learners Toolkit

Language Learners Toolkit is a publication for learners and users of English, particularly keeping users of English as a lingua franca in mind. Language Learners Toolkit gives you practical tips and insights into second language acquisition and learning English.

Mr Henriquez
Mr Henriquez

Written by Mr Henriquez

English teacher who writes about his views on language learning, applied linguistics, and technology. | MA in Applied Linguistics, University of Groningen (NL)

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