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Tiptoeing Through the Minefield

 
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johnslat



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 13859
Location: Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

PostPosted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 12:52 pm    Post subject: Tiptoeing Through the Minefield Reply with quote

I've downloaded a paper entitled "Tiptoeing Through the Minefield:
Teaching English in Higher Educational Institutes in the United Arab Emirates"
from Academia.edu.
However, it's about 312 pages long (Word Count: 99,855 words).

Here's a bit of the focus of the study:

In the context of rapidly expanding English-medium higher education in the UAE (United Arab Emirates), this thesis investigates how a group of native speaker English language teaching professionals perceive the social aspects of the environment in which they are working and the extent to which these perceptions affect the conceptualisation of their professional identities. Specifically, it focuses on how a complex interplay of cultural, economic, religious and political ideologies may impact upon the working lives of the respondents.
This research was carried out at eleven higher educational institutes in the UAE and data was gathered through interviews with English language teachers, teacher trainers and managers. The study’s findings reveal a complex, diverse and often conflicting picture of the way the respondents perceive the context in which they are working and a wide variety of attitudes regarding the ideological issues identified as impacting upon ELT in the region. However, emerging from the data was a dominant discourse of fear related to issues of power, religion, gender and money, maintained by uncertainty regarding the extent to which a censorial approach to teaching was required. The perceived precariousness of the respondents’ employment was also identified as the source of practises which raise ethical questions about the construction of professionalism in a context dominated by a discourse of fear and, in turn, implications for both practitioners and institutions.
Overall, this study reveals that in a context where ‘Gulf Arab/Muslim’ students interact with ‘Western native-speaker’ teachers, the preconceptions that often adhere to such labels in their respective societies may bear little resemblance to the attitudes, actions and beliefs of the individuals concerned. This raises implications both for the training of English teachers in the importance of contextual considerations and for the construction of the native speaker teacher in the literature."

I can't, of course, post the whole thing here. But if anyone's interested PM ,e and I can send you the attachment.


Here's the link:

http://independent.academia.edu/PaulHudson2
Regards,
John


Last edited by johnslat on Wed Jul 24, 2013 3:08 pm; edited 1 time in total
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DLIguy



Joined: 29 Jun 2013
Posts: 167
Location: Being led around by the nose...by you-know-who!

PostPosted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 2:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Brother! I've been there!
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syntaxed



Joined: 26 Nov 2012
Posts: 8
Location: USA

PostPosted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 4:31 pm    Post subject: The minefield Reply with quote

Thanks for posting that dissertation.I read it with interest. Having taught higher ed in UAE. I thought the paper was very accurate about the climate of fear that pervades the ed system for expat EL teachers. The writer also discussed how subject matter instructors often have no idea how to teach non-native speakers, or in multi-cultural settings and that they need to learn how to "edutain" like ESL teachers. Smile
He makes some interesting comments about future TESOL training at the end.
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