When arts meets enterprise: Transdisciplinarity, student identities, and EAP

This paper reports on a qualitative study investigating the experience and perspectives of students using English as an international language studying transdisciplinary master's degrees related to culture industries at Goldsmiths, University of London. The particular focus of this paper conce...

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Main Authors: Stella Harvey, Paul Stocks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UCL Press 2017-02-01
Series:London Review of Education
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=10793bc8-3276-4c3f-b395-e1ceb31e9ad0
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spelling doaj-37038f95773a4296ae7cef37cbc2899b2020-12-16T09:43:58ZengUCL PressLondon Review of Education1474-84792017-02-0110.18546/LRE.15.1.05When arts meets enterprise: Transdisciplinarity, student identities, and EAPStella HarveyPaul StocksThis paper reports on a qualitative study investigating the experience and perspectives of students using English as an international language studying transdisciplinary master's degrees related to culture industries at Goldsmiths, University of London. The particular focus of this paper concerns their experiences of writing several different genres on their degree programmes, including a category of written assessment that, in keeping with the transdisciplinary project of opening up disciplinary borders, transgresses typical genre parameters. We argue that (increasingly popular) transdisciplinary programmes of this kind challenge preconceived expectations about academic writing and require a high tolerance of ambiguity on the part of both students and EAP lecturers: established genre conventions may be destabilized and writing become a precarious yet inherently creative process. Our findings highlight the significance of students' identities with regard to negotiating these written assessments; they support the view that academic literacies' emphasis on student perspectives enriches text-oriented EAP pedagogy, and that insights gleaned from small-scale ethnographic studies of this kind enhance the embedding of subject-specific EAP academic writing development.https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=10793bc8-3276-4c3f-b395-e1ceb31e9ad0
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stella Harvey
Paul Stocks
spellingShingle Stella Harvey
Paul Stocks
When arts meets enterprise: Transdisciplinarity, student identities, and EAP
London Review of Education
author_facet Stella Harvey
Paul Stocks
author_sort Stella Harvey
title When arts meets enterprise: Transdisciplinarity, student identities, and EAP
title_short When arts meets enterprise: Transdisciplinarity, student identities, and EAP
title_full When arts meets enterprise: Transdisciplinarity, student identities, and EAP
title_fullStr When arts meets enterprise: Transdisciplinarity, student identities, and EAP
title_full_unstemmed When arts meets enterprise: Transdisciplinarity, student identities, and EAP
title_sort when arts meets enterprise: transdisciplinarity, student identities, and eap
publisher UCL Press
series London Review of Education
issn 1474-8479
publishDate 2017-02-01
description This paper reports on a qualitative study investigating the experience and perspectives of students using English as an international language studying transdisciplinary master's degrees related to culture industries at Goldsmiths, University of London. The particular focus of this paper concerns their experiences of writing several different genres on their degree programmes, including a category of written assessment that, in keeping with the transdisciplinary project of opening up disciplinary borders, transgresses typical genre parameters. We argue that (increasingly popular) transdisciplinary programmes of this kind challenge preconceived expectations about academic writing and require a high tolerance of ambiguity on the part of both students and EAP lecturers: established genre conventions may be destabilized and writing become a precarious yet inherently creative process. Our findings highlight the significance of students' identities with regard to negotiating these written assessments; they support the view that academic literacies' emphasis on student perspectives enriches text-oriented EAP pedagogy, and that insights gleaned from small-scale ethnographic studies of this kind enhance the embedding of subject-specific EAP academic writing development.
url https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=10793bc8-3276-4c3f-b395-e1ceb31e9ad0
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