English-Cairene Arabic Classroom Code Switching:An Interactional-Sociolinguistic Approach

Authors

  • Islam Youssef

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33806/ijaes2000.16.1.1

Keywords:

Arabic-English Studies

Abstract

This is a data-oriented study of code switching in the context of Cairene Arabic-English bilinguals in university classrooms. Data were collected through in-class observations of bilingual Egyptian professors in a program where English is the language of instruction. The observed code-switches are grouped into a structural typology based on their syntax and into a functional typology based on the communicative activities they perform. Each category is exemplified, and the examples are analyzed from an interactional-sociolinguistic perspective. I entertain both the hypothesis that certain verbal activities are associated with a given language during the switch, and the hypothesis that the code switching behavior is itself a contextual cue associated with certain activities, and contend that a synthesis of the two is needed. Patterns, tendencies, and attitudes of the participants are thoroughly discussed. By providing a careful treatment of code switching, the paper promotes the idea that it is a natural linguistic strategy which bilinguals employ to enrich their communication, not least in the classroom setting..

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Date of Publication

2016-01-01

How to Cite

Youssef, I. (2016). English-Cairene Arabic Classroom Code Switching:An Interactional-Sociolinguistic Approach. International Journal of Arabic-English Studies, 16(1), 7–28. https://doi.org/10.33806/ijaes2000.16.1.1

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