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Credit-based discipline specific English for academic purposes programmes in higher education: revitalizing the profession

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posted on 2024-07-12, 17:40 authored by Gavin MellesGavin Melles, Geoff Millar, Janne Morton, Suzanne Fegan
In the UK, North America and Australia, credit-bearing discipline specific English for Academic Purposes (EAP) courses are seen as a challenge to remedial views of English as a Second Language and a key element in revitalizing a profession on the periphery of the institution. However, the EAP field has to confront not only institutional challenges to its acceptability as a discipline but also tensions within the field. In this article we examine the tensions which underpin current and future directions in the field, review the development of credit-based EAP courses in the US, UK and Australia, and illustrate our discussion with a case study from the University of Melbourne, We conclude by arguing that discipline specific credit-based EAP offers promising hope for the future of the EAP discipline in higher education, but that to achieve this end the field and practitioners need to find a position between critique of and accommodation to discipline specific content.

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ISSN

1474-0222

Journal title

Arts and Humanities in Higher Education

Volume

4

Issue

3

Pagination

20 pp

Publisher

Sage

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2005 SAGE Publications. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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