English as an additional language teachers, policy enactments and intercultural understanding


Autoria(s): Liyanage, Indika; Walker, Tony; Weinmann, Michiko
Data(s)

01/04/2016

Resumo

The literature on policy enactment identifies the pivotal role played by school leaders and classroom teachers in response to attempts to implement reforms of current practices. An intersection of teachers’ personal and professional domains, such as enactment of National Curriculum priorities that identify intercultural understanding as a cross-curricular general capability embedded across learning areas, invests individual teachers’ attitudes and beliefs with additional significance. As local policy actors at the centre of this policy mix, teachers of EAL are presented with opportunities to play important roles in reconceptualising understandings of difference that resist categorisation and promote intercultural understanding. We argue that teachers’ beliefs and their attitudes to classroom linguistic and cultural diversity may be shaped significantly by their interaction with broader policy discourses, and that these are reflected in enactments—as opposed to implementations—of intercultural understanding policy in classrooms.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30085289

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Australian Council of TESOL Associations

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30085289/liyanage-englishasadditional-2016.pdf

Direitos

2016, ACTA

Tipo

Journal Article