Book contents
- Language Awareness in Business and the Professions
- Language Awareness in Business and the Professions
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Language Awareness in Business and the Professions
- Part III Language Awareness in Education and Training
- 8 Critical Language Awareness and Business Communication
- 9 A Developmental Framework for Professional Communication Competence
- 10 Membership Categorisation Analysis
- 11 Sociolinguistic Awareness in Business Professionals
- Index
- References
11 - Sociolinguistic Awareness in Business Professionals
Breaking Stereotypes and Language Myths
from Part III - Language Awareness in Education and Training
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2022
- Language Awareness in Business and the Professions
- Language Awareness in Business and the Professions
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Language Awareness in Business and the Professions
- Part III Language Awareness in Education and Training
- 8 Critical Language Awareness and Business Communication
- 9 A Developmental Framework for Professional Communication Competence
- 10 Membership Categorisation Analysis
- 11 Sociolinguistic Awareness in Business Professionals
- Index
- References
Summary
The chapter focuses on an innovative set of methods and approaches designed to change the manner in which business professionals view language and communication practices in their global workplaces. Despite the advances made within linguistics, particularly within the fields of sociolinguistics and discourse analysis, where large banks of empirical evidence of real-life workplace research have been systematically analysed, very little of this robust linguistic evidence finds its way into practical applications in workplace training. Too often, business training materials are based on outdated and inaccurate stereotypes about language at work, or flawed frameworks, such as ‘neurolinguistic programming’, which at best is based on pseudo-scientific knowledge and devoid of any real foundation of how any language system works. Other training methods include role-plays of how people think they communicate. In order to get the sociolinguistics of the workplace research firmly embedded as a form of applied linguistics in action, the chapter reports on the practical methods and approaches taken as part of an initiative at the University of Nottingham, Linguistic Profiling for Professionals.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Language Awareness in Business and the Professions , pp. 204 - 224Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
References
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