Higher education teachers’ attitudes towards English medium instruction: A three-country comparison
We report on a small scale study carried out in Austria, Italy and Poland which investigated the attitudes of university teachers engaged in teaching their academic subject through the medium of English. The data consisted of 25 teacher interviews. We focused on the topics of internationalisation of...
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Department of English Studies Faculty of Pedagogy and Fine Arts Adam Mickiewicz University
2016-09-01
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Series: | Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching |
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doaj-19d91e617def4bb282e02a0e5a2371ce2020-11-24T22:35:21ZengDepartment of English Studies Faculty of Pedagogy and Fine Arts Adam Mickiewicz UniversityStudies in Second Language Learning and Teaching2083-52052084-19652016-09-016345548610.14746/sllt.2016.6.3.5Higher education teachers’ attitudes towards English medium instruction: A three-country comparisonJulie DeardenErnesto Macaro We report on a small scale study carried out in Austria, Italy and Poland which investigated the attitudes of university teachers engaged in teaching their academic subject through the medium of English. The data consisted of 25 teacher interviews. We focused on the topics of internationalisation of universities, on policy and resourcing, and on the levels of English proficiency (theirs and those of their students) needed for effective English medium instruction (EMI). We also observed whether there were differences among the respondents from the three countries and attempted to relate any differences to the linguistic, educational and political context of each. Our findings suggest that whilst very similar concerns are in the minds of the teachers regardless of the country they were teaching in, some interesting variability in attitudes, relating to language and to history, could be detected. To our knowledge, this is the first study on EMI that compares teacher attitudes in three countries, hence its exploratory nature. Our findings would suggest that further research of such comparative kind might provide insights into how the phenomenon of EMI is being introduced and accepted across the world.https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/ssllt/article/view/6267 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Julie Dearden Ernesto Macaro |
spellingShingle |
Julie Dearden Ernesto Macaro Higher education teachers’ attitudes towards English medium instruction: A three-country comparison Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching |
author_facet |
Julie Dearden Ernesto Macaro |
author_sort |
Julie Dearden |
title |
Higher education teachers’ attitudes towards English medium instruction: A three-country comparison |
title_short |
Higher education teachers’ attitudes towards English medium instruction: A three-country comparison |
title_full |
Higher education teachers’ attitudes towards English medium instruction: A three-country comparison |
title_fullStr |
Higher education teachers’ attitudes towards English medium instruction: A three-country comparison |
title_full_unstemmed |
Higher education teachers’ attitudes towards English medium instruction: A three-country comparison |
title_sort |
higher education teachers’ attitudes towards english medium instruction: a three-country comparison |
publisher |
Department of English Studies Faculty of Pedagogy and Fine Arts Adam Mickiewicz University |
series |
Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching |
issn |
2083-5205 2084-1965 |
publishDate |
2016-09-01 |
description |
We report on a small scale study carried out in Austria, Italy and Poland which investigated the attitudes of university teachers engaged in teaching their academic subject through the medium of English. The data consisted of 25 teacher interviews. We focused on the topics of internationalisation of universities, on policy and resourcing, and on the levels of English proficiency (theirs and those of their students) needed for effective English medium instruction (EMI). We also observed whether there were differences among the respondents from the three countries and attempted to relate any differences to the linguistic, educational and political context of each. Our findings suggest that whilst very similar concerns are in the minds of the teachers regardless of the country they were teaching in, some interesting variability in attitudes, relating to language and to history, could be detected. To our knowledge, this is the first study on EMI that compares teacher attitudes in three countries, hence its exploratory nature. Our findings would suggest that further research of such comparative kind might provide insights into how the phenomenon of EMI is being introduced and accepted across the world. |
url |
https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/ssllt/article/view/6267 |
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AT juliedearden highereducationteachersattitudestowardsenglishmediuminstructionathreecountrycomparison AT ernestomacaro highereducationteachersattitudestowardsenglishmediuminstructionathreecountrycomparison |
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