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Agency in educational language planning : perspectives from higher education in Tunisia

[Abstract] 
Type Article
ISSN 17477506
information source ERIC
Author Badwan, Khawla Mohammed. Department of Languages, Information and Communications, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK.
Pages pp. 99-116
General Note Peer reviewed
Source Current Issues in Language Planning. Vol. 22, no. 1-2, 2021
Publisher Philadelphia: Routledge، 2021
Publisher address Taylor & Francis, Ltd. 530 Walnut Street Suite 850. Philadelphia, PA 19106. United States. Routledge. T: 0018003541420 T: 0012156258900. F: 0012152070050. http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals.
ERIC document no. EJ1284425
Descriptors Educational policies  -  Language usage  -  Multilingualism  -  French  -  Dialects  -  English  -  Second language instruction  -  Language of instruction  -  Administrator attitudes  -  Academic teaching personnel  -  Teacher attitudes  -  University students  -  Student attitudes  -  Employment opportunities  -  Institutional autonomy  -  Tunisia
Language of document English
Country United States
Post-modern approaches to language policy have emphasised the role of agency in implementing and appropriating language policies. While agency is often perceived in positive terms, Liddicoat [(2019). Constraints on agency in micro-language policy and planning in schools. In J. Bouchard & G. P. Glasgow (Eds.), "Agency in language policy and planning: Critical inquiries" (pp. 149-170). New York: Routledge.] calls on language policy researchers to investigate its problems and constraints. This article discusses the interplay of structure and agency in educational language policies in Tunisian higher education, a sector characterised by a 'benign neglect' approach to language policy. While doing so, it responds to Fenton-Smith and Gurney's [(2016). Actors and agency in academic language policy and planning. "Current Issues in Language Planning," 17(1), 72-87] observation that higher education contexts remain largely underexplored in the language policy scholarship. The article uses data from 12 semi-structured interviews from local higher education stakeholders in order to explore how their agency is exercised, rejected and contested. The study demonstrates that while agency creates room for flexibility and the ability to respond to changing local demands and aspirations, it can also cause problems such as inconsistency, uncertainty, and the reproduction of social inequalities. (As Provided)

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Badwan, Khawla Mohammed. (2021). Agency in educational language planning : perspectives from higher education in Tunisia. Current Issues in Language Planning. Vol. 22, no. 1-2, 2021. pp. 99-116 Retrieved from search.shamaa.org