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Implementing Moroccan Arabic (Darija) in MSA Curricula: Objectives, Approaches, and Challenges

Panel VIII-11, 2020 Annual Meeting

On Thursday, October 8 at 01:30 pm

Panel Description
This panel aims at presenting different perspectives on the objectives and the strategies of including Moroccan Arabic, Darija, in MSA curricula at all levels. As a major component of spoken Arabic and as a dialect reflecting an identity that covers a vast geographic area of the Arabic region, Darija needs to (re)-define its position and roles in Arabic courses. It also needs to benefit from existing leading teaching trends and make its methodological contributions. Panelists, who come from various academic settings, will address various ways of integrating teaching/learning Darija and making it a positive and enriching addition to Arabic teaching/learning. They will present their views and experiences related to Darija teaching. They will also share the approaches and strategies they use in teaching Spoken Moroccan Arabic. The panel will address the objectives, the methodologies, and the constraints of including Moroccan Arabic in MSA syllabi. It will, ultimately, seek to find creative ways of a smooth and rewarding inclusion of Darija in the Arabic classroom practices.of Darija in the Arabic classroom practices.
Disciplines
Language
Participants
  • Dr. Tarek El-Ariss -- Chair
  • Dr. Michael Turner -- Presenter
  • Thomas Leddy-Cecere -- Presenter
  • Mr. El Mostafa Ouajjani -- Organizer, Presenter
  • Mrs. Jamila Chahboun -- Presenter
Presentations
  • Mr. El Mostafa Ouajjani
    This paper will present the approaches and materials used in teaching Darija. It will also analyze the challenges that face the integration of Darija in the Arabic Program at Dartmouth. The paper will finally offer a glimpse at the short-term implications of adding the Spoken Arabic component to the program and its long-term positive impacts on the qualitative and quantitative growth of the program.
  • Thomas Leddy-Cecere
    The fourth paper proposed for this panel will approach the integration of Darija and Modern Standard Arabic from the perspective of new program establishment, discussing the author’s piloting of integrated curriculum in a small group tutorial setting at Bennington College, in anticipation of efforts to launch regular Arabic programming at the institution. This will link explicitly to corresponding experiences as described by the other panel members at different institutional types and program ages. The value of integrating Darija and MSA for independent learners and the cultivation/consolidation of program interest and individual student goals will be addressed. I will also reflect on challenges and rewards encountered as an instructor previously focused on instruction in other Arabic varieties.
  • Dr. Michael Turner
    In this paper, which follows on the initial two presentations’ exposé on teaching Darija at Dartmouth, I address the suitability of using an integrated approach to teaching Darija and Modern Standard Arabic within Arabic programs with a wider range of institutional profiles. To do so, I describe my firsthand experience implementing the same curriculum and materials in our recently established Arabic program at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, primarily at the first and second-year levels. The materials, which are described in detail in Turner (2018), consist of supplemental vocabulary, culture notes, and audiovisual components that are hosted on a standalone website and are accessible from any modern browser. They correspond with individual units and lessons from the popular Alif Baa and Al-Kitaab Arabic textbooks (Brustad et al. 2010; 2011), allowing students to acquire basic vocabulary in Moroccan Arabic for regular classroom use. By detailing the successes my students have seen in engaging two Arabic varieties in one classroom, I hope to elucidate the value the Darija component has had, to date, in the twin goals of on-site program building and preparing students for study and work abroad.
  • Mrs. Jamila Chahboun
    The first paper will provide a description of the Arabic Program at Dartmouth. It will shed light on how the program has evolved to become academically solid and gain popularity among students, especially after the creation and restructuration of the MES program. It will also tackle the reasons why Darija has been recently introduced into the program and the rationale behind its integration.