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E-raamat: Evolving Agendas in European English-Medium Higher Education: Interculturality, Multilingualism and Language Policy

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Feb-2016
  • Kirjastus: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781137543127
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Feb-2016
  • Kirjastus: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781137543127

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English medium-of-instruction (EMI) is transforming modern-day universities across the globe, creating increasingly complex linguistic and intercultural realities which lecturers, students and decision-makers must negotiate. Teaching subject matter at higher-education level through the medium of English, in countries where English is neither an official nor national language (e.g. the Netherlands, Germany), is a highly complex phenomenon fraught with challenges and benefits. EMI programmes are capable of transforming domestic degree programmes into platforms of intercultural teaching and learning by infusing them with greater numbers of international faculty and students. Equally however, EMI programmes pose a socio-linguistic, -cultural and -economic challenge by institutionalising English at higher-education level within a country and displacing somewhat national and minority languages. This book, the first of its kind, provides an up-to-date and empirically-informed exploration of these salient themes in Europe, based on significant empirical data gathered and analysed on the German EMI context.

Arvustused

Review 1 - Ulrich Ammon, University of Duisburg-Essen The overall standard and quality of the text is high. It starts out with a report on the rise of English and the decline of German as lingua francas of science, which finally resulted in the introduction of degree programmes in English at German institutes of tertiary education. The report makes reference to a wide array of studies and presents a wealth of data which are relevant for the present research. The methodology is up to date and adequately chosen. 'Grounded theory', actually a methodological principle or host of methods rather than a theory, which relies on qualitative rather than quantitative methods, 'triangulation', and carefully considered ethical considerations, are just some of the well-chosen methodological aspects which the author has heeded. The preparation of the actual data collection with pre-piloting phase and the combination of guided interviews with questionnaire studies for data eliciting prove great circumspection. The author is well aware of the lack of representativeness of his findings, due to unavoidably biased sampling, to failure of including foreign students in the interview studies and to, again unavoidably, subjective judgement. He therefore is right NOT to apply more refined statistical analyses like significance testing. The data, nevertheless, shed light on important issues and, above all, show ways of more reliable follow-up studies. Presentation and argumentation are clear and precise throughout. Earls' study substantially deepens our understanding of Germany's reasons and motivation for introducing the examined programmes and of views of participants, i.e. the three groups the study examines (students, teachers and supervisors). It gives significant new emic as well as etic information and adds knowledge on implicit language policy through comparing it with the explicit policy. It also shows that wide-spread assumptions, which have been expressed by researchers and politicians, are questionable and need further examination, like whether the overall effect of the programmes is detrimental to the study of German as a foreign language or rather enhances it, or whether the programmes provide brain gain for Germany or have the feared opposite effect of brain drain. The results are adequately refined in various ways through, for example, distinguishing indigenous German students (the country may loose through the programmes) from foreign students (the country may gain). The book will have no serious competition from existing publications, which either are much less specific and detailed (e.g. 2016: Dimova, Hultgren, Jensen; 2013: Doiz, Lasagabaster, Sierra; 2008: Gnutzmann) or written in German (2013: He, 2012: Fandrych, Sedlaczek), and are all conceived from the opposite top-down perspective. For all these reasons I warmly recommend publishing the book as proposed. Response to Reviews Many thanks for this positive review. The proposed monograph is based on my Ph.D thesis completed in August 2013. It will be revised significantly to improve readability and widen accessibility to a non-expert readership. Additionally, the methodology has been condensed significantly to frontload the 4 salient core themes of research.

List of Figures and Tables
ix
Acknowledgements xi
List of Abbreviations
xiii
Introduction 1(10)
1.1 The study and data
3(5)
1.2 Structure of the book
8(3)
1 English in Contemporary German Society and English Medium-of-Instruction Programmes
11(24)
Introduction
11(1)
1.1 Changing dynamics in the linguae francae of science
12(7)
1.2 English in contemporary German society
19(5)
1.3 English in the German higher education system
24(5)
1.4 EMI programmes: genesis and current realities
29(6)
Conclusion
34(1)
2 Language Policy and Planning in 21st-Century Europe
35(25)
Introduction
35(1)
2.1 Language policy, planning and management: defining the field
36(12)
2.2 Language policy and education
48(6)
2.3 Language policy as experiences
54(2)
2.4 Deciphering and understanding language policy and planning
56(4)
Conclusion
59(1)
3 Internationalisation, Globalisation and English-Medium Higher Education
60(44)
Introduction
60(1)
3.1 Globalisation vs internationalisation
61(2)
3.2 The globalisation factor in internationalisation
63(2)
3.3 Changing dynamics in internationalisation
65(3)
3.4 Bologna, Lisbon and beyond: English as the language of internationalisation
68(5)
3.5 Internationalisation through EMI: rationales and benefits
73(7)
3.6 Challenges to implementing EMI
80(14)
3.7 Implications of EMI
94(10)
Conclusion
102(2)
4 English Medium-of-Instruction Programmes as Platforms of Intercultural Teaching and Learning
104(42)
Introduction
104(1)
4.1 A tripartite understanding of intercultural ecologies, ideologies and planning
105(20)
4.2 The creation of an intercultural `Third Space'
125(6)
4.3 Interculturality of the pedagogy: from `Double Knowing' to `Triple Knowing'
131(15)
Conclusion
144(2)
5 English Medium-of-Instruction Programmes as a Mechanism of `Brain Drain, Gain and Circulation'
146(17)
Introduction
146(1)
5.1 Mitigating `brain drain'
146(5)
5.2 Pursuing `brain gain' and `brain circulation'
151(12)
Conclusion
160(3)
6 English Medium-of-Instruction Programmes as a Concomitant Challenge to, and Mechanism of, Implicit German Language Policy
163(26)
Introduction
163(1)
6.1 Challenging implicit German language policy
163(9)
6.2 Facilitating the promotion of German language and culture
172(17)
Conclusion
187(2)
7 English Medium of Instruction at Higher Education: Advancing Understanding of the Phenomenon
189(14)
Introduction
189(1)
7.1 The achievements and deficits of EMI
190(3)
7.2 An empirically derived model of language policy for EMI programmes
193(5)
7.3 Limitations of the current study
198(1)
7.4 Advancing the field: avenues for further inquiry
199(4)
Conclusion
201(2)
Notes 203(4)
References 207(28)
Index 235
Clive W. Earls is currently Lecturer in German and Linguistics at the School of Modern Languages, Literature and Culture at the National University of Ireland Maynooth. He teaches and publishes primarily on Applied Linguistics, Intercultural Communication, Sociolinguistics, Language Policy and Planning and Higher Education Policy.