What Do We Want? Justice! When Do We Want It? Now! Practitioners' Demands for a More Socially Just EAP

Hardman, W., Mighty, L. and Winiarska-Pringle, I. (2023) What Do We Want? Justice! When Do We Want It? Now! Practitioners' Demands for a More Socially Just EAP. BALEAP Conference 2023: Caution! EAP under Deconstruction, University of Warwick, UK, 19-21 Apr 2023.

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Abstract

A growing body of literature on EAP and its practitioners (e.g., Hadley, 2014, Ding and Bruce, 2017, Ding, 2019, Hadley, 2015, Bruce and Bond, 2022) has highlighted tensions arising from the positionality of the field in response to the powerful forces operating in higher education, such as neoliberalism and managerialism, on the one hand, and the difficulties faced by the EAP centers and practitioners to communicate the value of their work within their institutions, on the other. Caught between a rock and a hard place, EAP as a profession seems to be the beneficiary and the victim of its own success, devoting as much effort to maintaining its commercial success as, increasingly so, to challenging some of its unethical assumptions and practices. This session's main goal is to engage with those unethical assumptions and practices through a series of pre-recorded ‘provocations.’   Prior to the session, we will use journals, mailing lists and social media channels accessible to the EAP for Social Justice SIG to invite colleagues from across the EAP community to offer a short text, video, or audio recording voicing their ideas and/or experiences of where EAP as a profession falls short of its ethical obligations. This could be in the areas under-researched and under-reported in the field, such as, among others, race, parenting and caring, gender, unionisation, multilingualism, recruitment policies and practices, professional development opportunities (or lack of), mental health, but we will also welcome provocations related to other areas pertaining to the positionality and the development of the profession more broadly.  During the session, a selection of provocations will be shared in accessible formats and the participants will have a chance to discuss how those and the other provocations they have engaged with relate to their professional experiences and beliefs. The participants will then be encouraged to reimagine EAP and collectively formulate a set of demands for a more socially- just EAP profession.  Again, as part of our commitment to inclusivity, after the event, we will share our collective demands on the SIG’s website to foster further conversation around them with colleagues who were unable to attend the conference.

Item Type:Conference or Workshop Item
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Winiarska-Pringle, Mrs Iwona
Authors: Hardman, W., Mighty, L., and Winiarska-Pringle, I.
College/School:College of Arts & Humanities > School of Modern Languages and Cultures > Language Centre
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