ABSTRACT

English is increasingly used as a lingua franca (ELF) in communicative situations the world over with the acceleration of globalisation. This is in line with the increased introduction of English-medium instruction (EMI) to higher education institutions in many parts of the world to further promote both students’ and faculty’s mobility to make them competitive and employable in the globalised world, and to make their institutions more attractive and reputable. EMI and ELF, however, are rarely explicitly investigated together despite the fact that the spread of EMI cannot be separated from that of ELF. This volume tackles the issue head on by focusing on EMI in higher education from an ELF perspective. The volume includes contributions by Asian, European, Middle Eastern, South American and Anglo-American scholars. It discusses language policies, attitudes and identities, analyses of classroom EMI practices, case studies and finally, pedagogical implications from an ELF perspective, incorporating also theoretical and empirical issues in conducting EMI courses/programmes. The volume will be of great interest and use, not only to those who are conducting research on ELF, EMI, CLIL, language policy and related fields, but also to classroom teachers and policy makers who are conducting and/or planning to start EMI courses/programmes in their institutions or countries all over the world.

part I|83 pages

ELF in higher education – from the perspective of language policies at institutional and governmental levels

chapter 2|17 pages

The internationalization of higher education

But what about its lingua franca?

chapter 3|14 pages

Intelligibility, mimicry and internationalization

Localized practices in higher education, or can the Global South speak?

chapter 4|18 pages

Researching English-medium instruction at Swedish universities

Developments over the past decade

chapter 5|14 pages

English-medium instruction in the Korean higher education context

From an English as a lingua franca perspective

chapter 6|18 pages

EMI (English-medium instruction) in Japanese higher education

A paradoxical space for global and local sociolinguistic habitats

part II|101 pages

ELF in EMI settings – attitudes, identities and classroom practices

chapter 7|24 pages

Classroom discourse in EMI

On the dynamics of multilingual practices

chapter 8|14 pages

Enacting an ELF-informed English-medium instruction curriculum

An autoethnography

chapter 10|19 pages

‘English’-medium instruction in a Japanese university‘

Exploring students’ and lectures’ voices from an ELF perspective 1

part III|87 pages

ELF in EMI settings – policy, practice and pedagogy

chapter 12|18 pages

The role of English in the internationalisation of Chinese higher education

A case study of English-medium instruction in China

chapter 14|20 pages

Expanding ELF-informed EMI in Japanese higher education

A case study of actual graduates’ needs

chapter 15|12 pages

Beyond Global English(es)

University English program in transition

chapter 16|15 pages

Critical language testing and English lingua franca

How can one help the other?