Decolonizing English in Higher Education: Global Englishes and TESOL as Opportunities or Barriers

Author:

Baker Will1ORCID,Morán Panero Sonia1ORCID,Álvarez Valencia José Aldemar2ORCID,Alhasnawi Sami3ORCID,Boonsuk Yusop4ORCID,Ngo Phuong Le Hoang5ORCID,Martínez‐Sánchez Maritza M.6ORCID,Miranda Norbella2ORCID,Ronzón‐Montiel Gloria J.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Global Englishes University of Southampton Southampton UK

2. Universidad del Valle Cali Colombia

3. University of Al‐Qadisiyah Al Diwaniyah Iraq

4. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Prince of Songkla University Pattani Thailand

5. Faculty of English, University of Foreign Languages and International Studies Hue University Hue Vietnam

6. División de Humanidades y Lenguas Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Quintana Roo, Campus Cozumel Chetumal Mexico

7. Universidad Veracruzana Xalapa Mexico

Abstract

AbstractEnglish is core to HE (higher education) globally, with both HE and English seen as pathways to success for students. Yet, access to English is unequal and colonial ideologies associate English with Anglophone settings. Much of the research on English in HE has focused on elite institutions and students, while the majority of the world's HE students remain comparatively under‐researched. This paper reports on a mixed‐methods study of TESOL in five linguistically and socioculturally diverse HE settings in Colombia, Mexico, Iraq, Thailand, and Vietnam. The aims were to explore the roles and perceptions of English, TESOL, and other languages in policy and practice, (including multilingualism and Global Englishes) and how these related to processes of dis/empowerment and de/colonialization of HE. We sought to uncover the extent to which TESOL and English allowed or restricted access to opportunities of empowerment for different groups of students on their way to and through HE, and how English intersected with a range of dimensions of potential marginalization or privilege, particularly socioeconomic status, ethnicity, and rurality. We present findings from students through a questionnaire (n = 1820) and interviews with students, teachers, and administrators at each of the sites (n = 150).

Funder

British Council

Publisher

Wiley

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Language in the Multilingual University;Reference Module in Social Sciences;2024

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