English in the linguistic landscape of Mongolia: Indices of language spread and language competition

Kelli Erin Beery, Purdue University

Abstract

This study explores the linguistic landscape and sociolinguistic context of an expanding circle country, namely Mongolia. German, Korean, Japanese, and Turkish, in addition to English, Russian, and Chinese, are used by Mongolians to varying degrees, placing Mongolia in a unique linguistic situation. As such, Mongolia presents a complex profile of language learning, teaching, and use. To analyze Mongolia's sociolinguistic situation, three theories were incorporated: Kachru's Concentric Circle Model (1992c), Fishman, Cooper, and Rosenbaum's conditions of language spread (1977), and Moag's Life Cycle of Non-Native Englishes (1982). A questionnaire survey was conducted to ascertain who uses three more widely used languages, Russian, Chinese, and English, and why, as well as respondents' attitudes toward these languages. In the spring of 2003, 1,181 first-year university students at the Mongolian University of Science and Technology completed the survey. The respondents' use of Russian and English are almost equal in the educational domain, though a majority had studied Russian for more than a year and had studied English for less than one year. The uses and study of Chinese is markedly less. The respondents' attitudes toward English are more positively uniform than with Russian, while almost a third of the respondents had no opinion of Chinese.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Berns, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Linguistics|Language arts|Bilingual education|Multicultural education

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