Abstract:
From November 2015 to October 2020, Canada had welcomed 44,620 Syrian refugees to more than 350 communities
across the country. In 2019, it further surpassed the United States and Australia in the number of refugees settled. Lacking
the necessary language skills for living and working in a new country is one of the most critical barriers refugees face.
This paper aims to inform language-teaching professionals about pertinent linguistic and nonlinguistic issues as well as
pedagogical implications associated with supporting adult Syrian refugee learners, drawing both on the literature more
broadly and on the author’s research in the Canadian context.