Read the pedagogical context below: An English teacher is d...
Cold Kimchi Tomato Bibim Noodles

Ingredients
For the sauce
3 tablespoons tomato paste
2 tablespoons gochujang
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 1/2 tablespoons sesame oil
3 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
3 tablespoons kimchi juice
1 tablespoon honey
1 cup chopped kimchi
For the noodles
150 grams somen noodles
For the toppings
2 Persian cucumbers, sliced into matchsticks
1 shallot, minced
2 cups cherry tomatoes, halved
2 soft-boiled eggs (7 minutes, jammy yolks)
4 radishes, thinly sliced
To finish
Extra sesame oil, for drizzling
2 tablespoons furikake
Handful of cilantro
Directions
•Step 1
An English teacher is designing a lesson sequence based on the Cold Kimchi Tomato Bibim Noodles recipe, aiming to align with Brazil's Base Nacional Comum Curricular (BNCC) competencies for English language teaching. The BNCC emphasizes developing students' repertoires through contact with linguistic and cultural manifestations, critical language awareness, intercultural communication, and English as a lingua franca. The teacher plans activities exploring the recipe's fusion of Korean, Japanese, and Western ingredients as a metaphor for linguistic and cultural hybridity, discussing food globalization, analyzing how recipes constitute intercultural texts, and having students create their own fusion recipes using Brazilian ingredients. Regarding the BNCC's theoretical framework and contemporary approaches to English language teaching that reject native-speaker models and emphasize pluricentric, decolonial perspectives, which pedagogical approach best exemplifies BNCC-aligned practice?