Skip Navigation
Skip to contents

Science Editing : Science Editing

OPEN ACCESS
SEARCH
Search

Search

Page Path
HOME > Search
1 "Reward"
Filter
Filter
Article category
Keywords
Publication year
Authors
Original Article
Language policy and the disengagement of the international academic elite
John Harbord
Sci Ed. 2018;5(1):32-38.   Published online February 19, 2018
DOI: https://doi.org/10.6087/kcse.115
  • 13,316 View
  • 217 Download
  • 5 Web of Science
  • 2 Crossref
AbstractAbstract PDF
This paper explores the phenomena of academic multiliteracy (the habit of writing academically in more than one language) and of L2 monoliteracy (that of only writing academically in a language that is not one’s own) and their impact on policy. Based on interviews and surveys conducted with 33 multiliterate and 15 L2 monoliterate scholars connected to one university in Central Europe between 2010 and 2014, I show how incentives to publish in English constructed by educational policies often push ambitious young researchers whose first language is not English away from engaging in academic and societal debates in their first language community. They may thus disengage from the national community, with negative consequences for the interaction between global and local that is essential for good governance. To overcome the difficulty young scholars encounter in writing in their native languages, they should be taught writing both in their native language and in English. Furthermore, university and state policies should reward scholars for writing not only for the international community but also for local society.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • EMI, power and expressivism
    René Gabriëls, Robert Wilkinson
    Journal of English-Medium Instruction.2024; 3(1): 1.     CrossRef
  • Journal metrics of Clinical and Molecular Hepatology based on the Web of Science Core Collection
    Sun Huh
    Clinical and Molecular Hepatology.2018; 24(2): 137.     CrossRef

Science Editing : Science Editing