This book analyzes how the English as a Second Language (ESL) pedagogic
genre has been re-contextualized in the Shanghai Foreign Language
Education Press National College English Teaching Contest (SFLEP) for
presentation to the contest judges and audience. Departing from prior
research on contest discourse, it focuses on the role of teaching
contests in re-contextualizing educational practices. Moreover, it
addresses the processes of genre blurring and solidification at work in
new discourse events.
The results presented here serve to frame teaching contest discourse in
a fuller contextual configuration and will help contest sponsors,
participants, and audience members better understand this popular social
event and its relations to real-world teaching practices, while
simultaneously helping teachers to understand the relevance of such
contest practice. Moreover, the research methods will benefit those
linguists who are interested in researching other types of event
discourses.