Synecdochising student identities: EAL teachers' positioning of adult EAL students in Australia

Author:

Sumithran Suma,Chowdhury RaqibORCID,Barnes MelissaORCID

Abstract

PurposeAdult student identities within EAL (English as an Additional Language) classrooms have often been positioned as static, homogenised and exoticised within scholarly literature. Within such positioning, teachers have embraced pedagogical practices which classify students by country of origin and represent student identities within binaries of Self and the Other, limiting these students' identity positionings for adoption within the EAL classroom. As a result, students are often rendered voiceless by essentialist discourses on culture and identity in the classroom that serve to replicate and reinforce dominant societal discourses and strengthen existing institutional power structures.Design/methodology/approachBy drawing on a postcolonial theoretical framework comprising theories of race, identity, power, representation, synecdoche and Third Space, this paper interrogates current literature to understand the complex multidimensional and dynamic cultural identities of adult EAL students.FindingsThis paper reveals that adult EAL students are still being oversimplified within the classroom, not just disadvantaging students and institutions, but also hindering multicultural pedagogies.Originality/valueThis paper suggests that teachers require opportunities for critical reflection incorporated within a critical pedagogy in decolonised classrooms that can not only build respectful and equitable awareness of their students' cultural identities and educational and historical backgrounds but provide important implications for effective pedagogical practices.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

General Social Sciences,Education

Reference48 articles.

1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2019), “Net overseas migration”, available at: https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/population/migration-australia/2018-19#net-overseas-migration.

2. Australian Government Department of Home Affairs (2020), “Adult migrant English program (AMEP)”, available at: https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/settling-in-australia/amep/about-the-program.

3. Language learning and the definition of one's social, cultural, and racial identity;TESOL Quarterly,2006

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