Investment, linguistic capital and identity in Chinese university students' EMI experience
Investment, linguistic capital and identity in Chinese university students' EMI experience
In line with China’s vision for international education, English medium instruction (EMI) is booming in Chinese higher education, which positions Chinese students in circumstances where they need to negotiate among different commitments, roles, identities, and desires involving individual, national and international agendas. This paper draws on the investment theory and model developed by Norton and Darvin to explore Chinese students’ EMI experience in respect of their investment goals, capital, and future identities underpinning their engagement. Informed by the concepts of English as a lingua franca and translanguaging, the paper deconstructs the notion of language in EMI and draws on the data retrieved in one of the top universities based in Beijing that offers EMI courses to Chinese students to examine their investments revolving around the issue of language. The findings show that Chinese students focus on disciplinary identities and national identities that EMI courses facilitate but refrain from imagining their engagement in the international work environment due to low esteems about translingualism as linguistic resources and admirations for English monolingualism as capital that would enable them to embrace international identities. The paper concludes by calling for developing critical language awareness in EMI implementation.
Critical language awareness, identity, investment, linguistic capital, translingualism
Wang, Ying
dae44497-8e51-48ab-8173-7844f152f6e9
Jiang, Dong
530bf0d6-a882-4f25-ab86-0dd756ab62a5
Wang, Ying
dae44497-8e51-48ab-8173-7844f152f6e9
Jiang, Dong
530bf0d6-a882-4f25-ab86-0dd756ab62a5
Wang, Ying and Jiang, Dong
(2024)
Investment, linguistic capital and identity in Chinese university students' EMI experience.
Language and Education.
(doi:10.1080/09500782.2024.2314136).
Abstract
In line with China’s vision for international education, English medium instruction (EMI) is booming in Chinese higher education, which positions Chinese students in circumstances where they need to negotiate among different commitments, roles, identities, and desires involving individual, national and international agendas. This paper draws on the investment theory and model developed by Norton and Darvin to explore Chinese students’ EMI experience in respect of their investment goals, capital, and future identities underpinning their engagement. Informed by the concepts of English as a lingua franca and translanguaging, the paper deconstructs the notion of language in EMI and draws on the data retrieved in one of the top universities based in Beijing that offers EMI courses to Chinese students to examine their investments revolving around the issue of language. The findings show that Chinese students focus on disciplinary identities and national identities that EMI courses facilitate but refrain from imagining their engagement in the international work environment due to low esteems about translingualism as linguistic resources and admirations for English monolingualism as capital that would enable them to embrace international identities. The paper concludes by calling for developing critical language awareness in EMI implementation.
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Investment linguistic capital and identity in Chinese university students EMI experience
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 January 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 February 2024
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© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Keywords:
Critical language awareness, identity, investment, linguistic capital, translingualism
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Local EPrints ID: 487394
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487394
ISSN: 0950-0782
PURE UUID: 93cd00fe-7cad-439e-a9ab-bb8831138402
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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2024 12:15
Last modified: 17 Apr 2024 16:32
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Author:
Dong Jiang
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