English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe?

Recent years have witnessed a heightening of interest in the role of teachers working in EAP (English for Academic Purposes), particularly with regard to defining and debating their professional identity. However, it must be said that most authors have painted a rather dismal picture, when comparing...

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Main Author: Bell, Douglas
Format: Monograph
Language:English
Published: N/A 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64813/
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author Bell, Douglas
author_facet Bell, Douglas
author_sort Bell, Douglas
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description Recent years have witnessed a heightening of interest in the role of teachers working in EAP (English for Academic Purposes), particularly with regard to defining and debating their professional identity. However, it must be said that most authors have painted a rather dismal picture, when comparing the status and professional standing of English language teachers in Higher Education with that of academics working in other disciplines. Drawing on concepts and sociological models developed by the educationalists Tony Becher, Basil Bernstein and Pierre Bourdieu, this reflective paper proposes a theoretical framework to account for why these differences in status might be so. The paper concludes that EAP as an academic discipline currently faces some significant threats. However, the paper also argues that if EAP practitioners are to gain the professional recognition they desire, then they themselves must strive to trade more explicitly on the forms of capital valued by the academy.
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spelling nottingham-648132021-06-16T02:32:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64813/ English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe? Bell, Douglas Recent years have witnessed a heightening of interest in the role of teachers working in EAP (English for Academic Purposes), particularly with regard to defining and debating their professional identity. However, it must be said that most authors have painted a rather dismal picture, when comparing the status and professional standing of English language teachers in Higher Education with that of academics working in other disciplines. Drawing on concepts and sociological models developed by the educationalists Tony Becher, Basil Bernstein and Pierre Bourdieu, this reflective paper proposes a theoretical framework to account for why these differences in status might be so. The paper concludes that EAP as an academic discipline currently faces some significant threats. However, the paper also argues that if EAP practitioners are to gain the professional recognition they desire, then they themselves must strive to trade more explicitly on the forms of capital valued by the academy. N/A 2021-01-01 Monograph NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64813/7/English%20language%20teachers%20in%20higher%20education%20a%20different%20tribe.pdf Bell, Douglas (2021) English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe? Working Paper. N/A. (Submitted) English Language Teaching; EAP; professional status; academic identity; academic tribes; symbolic capital; private providers; Becher; Bernstein; Bourdieu
spellingShingle English Language Teaching; EAP; professional status; academic identity; academic tribes; symbolic capital; private providers; Becher; Bernstein; Bourdieu
Bell, Douglas
English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe?
title English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe?
title_full English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe?
title_fullStr English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe?
title_full_unstemmed English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe?
title_short English language teachers in higher education: a different tribe?
title_sort english language teachers in higher education: a different tribe?
topic English Language Teaching; EAP; professional status; academic identity; academic tribes; symbolic capital; private providers; Becher; Bernstein; Bourdieu
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64813/