The neoliberal structures of English in Japanese higher education: applying Bernstein's pedagogic device

被引:6
|
作者
Smith, Michael D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Kwansei Gakuin Univ, Sch Int Studies, Toshokan, Japan
关键词
Higher education policy; neoliberalism; globalisation; Bernstein; Japan; INSTRUCTION INITIATIVES; POLICY; PISA; OECD;
D O I
10.1080/14664208.2022.2102330
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
As global neoliberalism continues to take root, States aim to produce linguistically-skilled human capital to gain an advantage within highly-competitive market conditions. With this relationship in view, English language proficiency constitutes a 'rational' educational pathway for national and personal-level success within an outwardly meritocratic knowledge economy. Yet, in Japan, as in many other locales, English has been accused of strengthening pre-existing power relations. Accordingly, this inquiry draws on Bernstein's pedagogic device, to address the nested fields of production, recontextualisation, and reproduction shaping educational practice. Regarding production, normative OECD discourses framing essential key competencies favour an epistemic hierarchy privileging the orthodoxy of free-market capitalism. Through unequal pedagogic reform, meanwhile, the recontextualisation of regulatory discourse limits valued forms of knowledge to learners attending prestigious mass-market institutions. This, in turn, holds implications for reproduction. Through recognition and realisation, the classification and framing of English as a 'valid' knowledge privilege students from middle-class households. The appropriation of English as a 'rational' contact point for global communication, business, and finance thereby risks obfuscating the socio-economic order determining its practice.
引用
收藏
页码:334 / 356
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The Current Situation and Prospects of China's Higher Education of English in General Education
    Wang, Luoxia
    Li, Zongju
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2014 CONFERENCE ON INFORMATISATION IN EDUCATION, MANAGEMENT AND BUSINESS, 2014, : 361 - 363
  • [22] 'It's all about the product': doing research in neoliberal times in Indonesian higher education
    Sunendar, Dadang
    Adriany, Vina
    GLOBALISATION SOCIETIES AND EDUCATION, 2023,
  • [23] Navigating the Nine C's: Hopeful Women Advocates Remapping Neoliberal Higher Education
    Winter, Abigail
    Rieger, Janice
    Vickery, Nicole
    Satherley, Shannon
    Gillet-Swan, Jenna
    Valencia-Forrester, Faith
    Bobongie-Harris, Francis
    Kirkwood, Katherine
    Chamorro-Koc, Marianella
    Johnstone, Sarah
    Pinel, Kathryn
    GENDER WORK AND ORGANIZATION, 2025,
  • [24] China's Higher Education VS English Cultural Hegemony
    Zhang Shubin
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATION MANAGEMENT SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2010, : 1145 - 1149
  • [25] English for content instruction in a Japanese higher education setting: examining challenges, contradictions and anomalies
    Toh, Glenn
    LANGUAGE AND EDUCATION, 2014, 28 (04) : 299 - 318
  • [26] Foreign female English teachers in Japanese higher education: narratives from our quarter
    Liu, Sijia
    ASIA PACIFIC BUSINESS REVIEW, 2024, 30 (04) : 850 - 854
  • [27] Applying vocational education and training pedagogy in business English courses for China's English major undergraduates
    Xie, Qing
    EDUCATION AND TRAINING, 2021, 63 (02): : 292 - 312
  • [28] Breaking with old ideas: Chinese students' perceptions of China's 'neoliberal turn' in higher education
    Gong, Qian
    Dobinson, Toni
    DISCOURSE-STUDIES IN THE CULTURAL POLITICS OF EDUCATION, 2019, 40 (03) : 331 - 342
  • [29] Japanese Students' Perceptions of Digital Game Use for English-Language Learning in Higher Education
    Bolliger, Doris U.
    Mills, Daniel
    White, Jeremy
    Kohyama, Megumi
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL COMPUTING RESEARCH, 2015, 53 (03) : 384 - 408
  • [30] Applying the UTAUT model in Engineering Higher Education: Teacher's Technology Adoption
    Marques, Bertil P.
    Villate, Jaime E.
    Carvalho, Carlos Vaz
    SISTEMAS E TECNOLOGIAS DE INFORMACAO, VOL I, 2011, : 549 - +