Learning from Short-Term Study Abroad to Innovate Intensive English Programs on U.S. Campuses
Author(s) -
Jonathan K. McNair,
Eric Friginal,
Alison Camacho
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
frontiers the interdisciplinary journal of study abroad
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2380-8144
pISSN - 1085-4568
DOI - 10.36366/frontiers.v32i3.584
Subject(s) - study abroad , english for academic purposes , term (time) , ethnography , pedagogy , best practice , higher education , medical education , graduate students , political science , psychology , public relations , sociology , medicine , physics , quantum mechanics , anthropology , law
A major focus of Intensive English Programs (IEPs) in most universities in the United States (U.S.) is English for Academic Purposes (EAP), which prepares English language learners for undergraduate and graduate study, delivered or facilitated in English across scholarly and professional settings. The same EAP approach may also be successfully implemented for short-term, inbound study abroad programs for international students and professionals hosted in the U.S. This qualitative review of current best practices aims to (1) to explore and document measurable trends on the efficacy of outbound study abroad programs from U.S. universities that may, ultimately, help develop short-term, inbound EAP programs, (2) provide a framework that could help IEP directors and coordinators in running short-term EAP courses, and (3) discuss innovations and future directions in hosting short-term EAP programs in an IEP setting in the U.S. Data sources include an extensive review of literature in the field (especially focusing on faculty-led study abroad courses overseas), ethnographic interviews of various stakeholders, and assessment/evaluation results from EAP materials developed specifically for international students in short-term IEP programs.
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