Professional Identity (Re)Construction of L2 Writing Scholars

Little research has been conducted on the professional identities of L2 writing scholars despite the increasing number of researchers, teachers, and graduate students identifying themselves as L2 writing specialists. While the (re)construction of L2 writing scholars’ professional identities have rea...

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Main Authors: Kim, Soo Hyon, Saenkhum, Tanita
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2019-09-01
Series:L2 Journal
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4j82s0ng
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spelling doaj-870ca098093943e3b4e9fdde4aaf39b52020-11-25T03:28:50ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaL2 Journal1945-02221945-02222019-09-011121834Professional Identity (Re)Construction of L2 Writing ScholarsKim, Soo HyonSaenkhum, TanitaLittle research has been conducted on the professional identities of L2 writing scholars despite the increasing number of researchers, teachers, and graduate students identifying themselves as L2 writing specialists. While the (re)construction of L2 writing scholars’ professional identities have real consequences for their career, the challenges and opportunities resulting from their work, situated in several related disciplines, have neither been explicitly nor adequately discussed. Through an analytic autoethnography (Anderson, 2006), this study examines the cases of two L2 writing faculty as they (re)construct their professional identities within their institutions and broader academic communities. Using identity in practice as its theoretical framework, the study provides a rich, in-depth account of how the focal L2 writing scholars continue to negotiate and reconcile their professional identities among adjacent fields such as applied linguistics, TESOL, composition, and education. Results reveal that L2 writing scholars (re)construct their professional identities by negotiating their identity positions within their institutional and disciplinary contexts, by defining the boundaries of their professional identities through community membership, and by participating in multiple academic communities. Drawing on these results, the study considers how L2 writing scholars’ professional identity (re)construction reflects the development of L2 writing as a field/profession.https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4j82s0ng
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kim, Soo Hyon
Saenkhum, Tanita
spellingShingle Kim, Soo Hyon
Saenkhum, Tanita
Professional Identity (Re)Construction of L2 Writing Scholars
L2 Journal
author_facet Kim, Soo Hyon
Saenkhum, Tanita
author_sort Kim, Soo Hyon
title Professional Identity (Re)Construction of L2 Writing Scholars
title_short Professional Identity (Re)Construction of L2 Writing Scholars
title_full Professional Identity (Re)Construction of L2 Writing Scholars
title_fullStr Professional Identity (Re)Construction of L2 Writing Scholars
title_full_unstemmed Professional Identity (Re)Construction of L2 Writing Scholars
title_sort professional identity (re)construction of l2 writing scholars
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series L2 Journal
issn 1945-0222
1945-0222
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Little research has been conducted on the professional identities of L2 writing scholars despite the increasing number of researchers, teachers, and graduate students identifying themselves as L2 writing specialists. While the (re)construction of L2 writing scholars’ professional identities have real consequences for their career, the challenges and opportunities resulting from their work, situated in several related disciplines, have neither been explicitly nor adequately discussed. Through an analytic autoethnography (Anderson, 2006), this study examines the cases of two L2 writing faculty as they (re)construct their professional identities within their institutions and broader academic communities. Using identity in practice as its theoretical framework, the study provides a rich, in-depth account of how the focal L2 writing scholars continue to negotiate and reconcile their professional identities among adjacent fields such as applied linguistics, TESOL, composition, and education. Results reveal that L2 writing scholars (re)construct their professional identities by negotiating their identity positions within their institutional and disciplinary contexts, by defining the boundaries of their professional identities through community membership, and by participating in multiple academic communities. Drawing on these results, the study considers how L2 writing scholars’ professional identity (re)construction reflects the development of L2 writing as a field/profession.
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4j82s0ng
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