Immunologically speaking: Oral examinations, ELF and EMI


Abstract


Abstract – “English-medium instruction” (EMI) is the name given to the use of the English language in universities to teach academic subjects in countries where the majority of the population does not have English as a first language (Dearden 2014). What this definition fails to mention is that interaction during EMI courses is almost entirely through the medium of English as a lingua franca (ELF). This article focuses on the challenges facing lecturers and examiners working on English-taught programmes (ETPs) in ELF and the role of language experts in supporting them. As a basis for discussion, the article uses data from a set of immunology oral examinations carried out during an undergraduate degree programme in Medicine being taught through EMI. Qualitative analysis of the data shows that this particular oral examination involves students and examiners co-constructing highly specific, chronological narratives of immunological sequences. It is argued that, far from being an exclusively linguistic matter, this kind of narrative co-construction involves acquiring a unique discursive skill set and that preparing students for the examination needs to involve increasing students’ awareness and practice of the construction process. Discussion focuses on how far qualitative results of this kind of local examination data are generalisable to other EMI contexts and whether there are recommendations for language experts and policymakers in understanding and improving the quality of EMI lecturing and assessment through in other languacultures. The article will also examine how far an ELF orientation to pedagogy can assist EMI lecturers, examiners and students in their decision-making regarding materials, methods and their own English usage.


DOI Code: 10.1285/i22390359v24p185

Keywords: English as a lingua franca; English-medium instruction (EMI); oral examination; knowledge transmission; immunology.

References


Airey J. 2016, CLIL and EAP (Content and Language Integrated Language Learning and English for Academic Purposes), in Hyland K. and Shaw M. (eds.), Routledge Handbook of English for Academic Purposes, Routledge, Abingdon, pp. 71-83.

Al-Bakri S. 2013, Problematizing English Medium Instruction in Oman, in “International Journal of Bilingual and Monolingual teachers of English” 2, pp. 55-69.

Ammon U. and McConnell G. 2002, English as an Academic Language in Europe, Peter Lang, Frankfürt.

Anderson L. 1999, La co-costruzione di competenza negli esami orali e il ruolo della comunicazione metapragmatica, in Ciliberti A. and Anderson L. (a cura di), Le forme della comunicazione accademica, Ricerche linguistiche sulla didattica universitaria in ambito umanistico, Franco Angeli, Milano, pp. 192-219.

Basturkmen H. and Shackleford N. 2015, How Content Lecturers help Students with Language: an Observational Study of Language-related Episodes in Interaction in First Year Accounting Classrooms, in “English for Specific Purposes” 37, pp. 87-97.

Berdini A. 2016, English medium instruction: percezioni delle modalità d’esame e metodi di valutazione, unpublished MA thesis, University of Rome Tor Vergata.

Björkman B. 2013, English as an academic lingua franca: An investigation of form and communicative effectiveness, De Gruyter Mouton, Berlin and Boston.

Borg S. 2016, English Medium Instruction In Iraqi Kurdistan: Perspectives From Lecturers At State Universities, British Council, London.

Bowles H. and Cogo A. 2015 (eds.), International Perspectives on English as a Lingua Franca, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.

Brown G. 1994, Modes of understanding, in Brown G., Malmkjær K., Pollitt A. and Williams J. (eds.), Language and Understanding, Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 10-20.

Chapple J. 2015, Teaching in English is not necessarily the teaching of English, in “International Education Studies” 8 [3], pp. 1-13.

Ciliberti A. 1999, Gli esami orali: tra agentività e dipendenza, tra auto-referenzialità ed etero-referenzialità, in Ciliberti A. and Anderson L. (a cura di), Le forme della comunicazione accademica, Ricerche linguistiche sulla didattica universitaria in ambito umanistico, Franco Angeli, Milano, pp. 173-191.

Costa F. 2012, Focus on form in ICLHE Lectures. Evidence from English-medium science lectures by native Speakers of Italian, in “AILA Review” 25, pp. 30-47.

Dearden J. 2014, EMI - a growing global phenomenon, British Council, London.

Fenton Smith B., Humphreys P. and Walkinshaw I. 2017, English Medium Instruction in Higher Education in Asia-Pacific: from Policy to Pedagogy, Springer, Dordrecht.

Floris F. 2014, Learning Subject matter through English as the medium of instruction: students’ and teachers’ perspectives, in “Asian Englishes” 16 [1], pp. 47-59.

Giordani F. 2016, Content lecturers’ perceptions of English medium instruction, unpublished MA thesis, University of Rome Tor Vergata.

Hoey M. 1983, On the surface of discourse, George Allen and Unwin, London.

Hoey M. 2001, Textual interaction, an introduction to written discourse analysis, Routledge, London.

Hyland K. 2013, Academic discourse, in Hyland K. and Partridge B. (eds.), The Bloomsbury Companion to Discourse Analysis, Bloomsbury, London, pp. 171-184.

Kramsch C. 2014, Teaching foreign languages in an era of globalisation: Introduction, in “The Modern Language Journal” 98 [1], pp. 296-311.

Matsuda A. (ed.) 2012, Principles and Practices of Teaching English as an International Language, Multilingual Matters, Bristol.

Molino A. 2015, Comprensione e interazione nelle lezioni universitarie in lingua inglese, in “RiCOGNIZIONI” 2 [4], pp. 129-143.

Sagucio D. 2015, Content Area Effectiveness: English vs Filipino Medium of Instruction, in “People: International Journal of Social Sciences” 2 [1], pp. 1514-1529.

Sarangi S. and Candlin C., 2003, Trading between reflexivity and relevance: new challenges for applied linguistics, in “Applied Linguistics” 24 [3], pp. 271-285.

Seedhouse P. 2004. The interactional architecture of the language classroom, Blackwell, Oxford.

Sharifian F. (ed.) 2009, English as an International Language: perspectives and pedagogical issues, Multilingual Matters, Bristol.

Smit U. 2010, English as a lingua franca in higher education: a longitudinal study of classroom discourse, De Gruyter Mouton, Berlin and Boston.

Wächter B. and Maiworm F. 2015, English-taught programmes in European Higher Education: the state of play in 2014, Lemmens, Bonn.


Full Text: pdf

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribuzione - Non commerciale - Non opere derivate 3.0 Italia License.