English-Medium Instruction in Chinese Universities Perspectives, discourse and evaluation Routledge Critical Studies in Asian Education Series
Coordonnateurs : Zhao Jing, Dixon L. Quentin
This edited book is about the rationale, practice and classroom implementation of English-medium instruction courses in Chinese universities. It specifically focuses on classroom discourse analysis across different disciplines and settings. The main themes of this book are: describing the state educational policies toward English-medium instruction at the tertiary level; distinguishing English-medium instruction from mainstream foreign language learning; analyzing curricula and discourse at the classroom level and evaluating the learning effectiveness of these courses. This book covers the widespread implementation of English-medium courses in China across different disciplines, and it provides a window for researchers and practitioners from other parts of the world to see the curriculum design, lesson planning, discourse features and teacher-student interaction in English-medium classrooms in China. Contributors to this volume consists of a panel of highly respected researchers in the fields of bilingual education, English-medium instruction, classroom discourse analysis and language program evaluation.
Chapters include,
- Balance of Content and Language in English-Medium Instruction Classrooms
- English-Medium Instruction in a Math Classroom: An Observation Study of Classroom Discourse
- Asking and answering questions in EMI classrooms: What is the Cognitive and Syntactic Complexity Level?
Introduction
Part I Perspectives
Chapter 1: Balance of Content and Language in English-Medium Instruction Classrooms
Chapter 2: College Students’ Perspectives on English Medium Instruction and their English Learning Motivational Intensity
Chapter 3: College Students’ Attitudes Toward English-Medium Instruction and the English Language
Part II Classroom Discourse
Chapter 4: English-Medium Instruction in a Medical School: Managing Classroom Discourse
Chapter 5: English-Medium Instruction Classroom Discourse in a Liberal Arts School: History Recontextualized
Chapter 6: English-Medium Instruction in a Math Class: An Observation Study of Classroom Discourse
Part III Evaluation
Chapter 7: Evaluation of learning outcomes in an education course: Does it work?
Chapter 8: Using English to Teach Content Courses in Universities for Nationalities: Policies, Practices and Challenges
Chapter 9: Asking and Answering Questions in English-Medium Instruction Classrooms: What is the Cognitive and Syntactic Complexity Level?
Conclusion L. Quentin Dixon, Jing Zhao
Jing Zhao is Associate Professor at Sun Yat-sen University, China, and Visiting Research Scholar at Harvard Graduate School of Education, US (2014-15). She earned her doctoral degree in Curriculum and Instruction, specializing in English as a Second Language, from Texas A&M University. Dr. Zhao’s research interests include second language acquisition, effectiveness of various bilingual programs, and ESL/EFL teacher development. Her work appeared in Annals of Dyslexia, International Journal of Bilingualism and Contemporary Educational Psychology.
L. Quentin Dixon is Associate Professor in the Department of Teaching, Learning and Culture, Texas A&M University. Dr. Dixon's research interests focus on the language and literacy development of bilinguals, and in using rigorous quantitative research methods to study educational questions. Dr. Dixon has published in leading journals such as Review of Educational Research, Journal of Research in Reading, and Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology.
Date de parution : 03-2017
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 08-2018
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes d’English-Medium Instruction in Chinese Universities :
Mots-clés :
EMI Course; EMI Program; Chinese English Bilingual Education; program; EMI Class; L; Quentin Dixon; English Medium Instruction; Xiao Yang; EMI Teacher; Rining Wei; EMI Classroom; Jieyun Feng; English Language Radio Stations; Qing Ma; Transitional Bilingual Education; Hongchen Xu; Forensic Toxicological Analysis; Chenguang Chang; CLIL Program; Hui Yu; Teach Content Courses; Meng Liu; Chinese Universities; Fuhui Tong; Systemic Functional Linguistics; Shifang Tang; Professional Development; Miao Li; Critical Classroom Discourse Analysis; Anwei Feng; Grammatical Metaphor; Binlan Huang; English Proficiency; Qiang Li; English Language Learners; Fu Ma; EMI Policy; Zhenai Zhang; Vice Versa; Biao Zhang; Morphological Awareness; Shuang Liang; Instructional Language; Liang Li; CLIL Research; Xianghua Pei; English Medium Courses; Guangwei Hu; Xiuhai Li