Agency and Accountability in the Academic Reading of International Graduate Students

Author:

Altalouli MahmoudORCID

Abstract

This grounded theory study explores the academic English reading practices of six EAL (English as an additional language) students from Asia in a graduate course in their first semester at a U.S. university. Academic reading is an understudied yet foundational literacy practice for graduate students. Data include classroom observations of the graduate course during one semester; individual interviews with six students and the course instructor; and the collection of documents. Drawing on the analytic lenses of agency and accountability, the findings show that while the requirements established by the instructor and syllabus explicitly or implicitly held students accountable for the work, students also responded strategically to the course’s accountability structure. They agentively made choices about how to engage with the readings in terms of the purposes for which they read and how much time they spent on the readings.

Publisher

STAR Scholars Network

Subject

Education

Reference38 articles.

1. Altalouli, M. (2018). More surefire ways to increase the breadth and depth of vocabulary knowledge: A response to Shoba Bandi-Rao’s “nontraditional students’ insight into vocabulary learning in the ESL classroom.” NYS TESOL Journal, 5(1), 32-33.

2. Archer, M. S. (2003). Structure, agency and the internal conversation. Cambridge University Press.

3. Bauer, H., & Picciotto, M. (2013). Writing in America: International students and first-year composition. Writing on the Edge, 23(2), 75-86.

4. Bourdieu, P. (1984). Distinction. A social critique of the judgement of taste (R. Nice, Trans). Harvard University Press.

5. Bourdieu, P. (1990). The logic of practice (R. Nice, Trans). Stanford University Press.

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