ARTICLE
TITLE

From Academic Literacy to Critical Literacy: Re-imagining English Language Pedagogy in Indian Higher Education

SUMMARY

This paper will argue that the dominant imagining of ‘academic literacy’ as an organising framework for English language learning within both public and private universities in India cannot adequately engage with the imperative of social and political empowerment for disadvantaged students. Instead, I will propose that the critical literacy orientation, by foregrounding the question of power in language learning as well as emphasising the role of language in re-imagining both interpersonal and institutional practices, can offer a powerful alternative to the existing models of pedagogic and writing support across public/private university settings. The paper will conclude by providing a few conceptual and practical pointers for how existing literacy programs may work towards developing such an orientation.

 Articles related

Sergiy Golovashchenko    

The focus of this article is the global and European experience of the reception, assimilation, and social application of the Bible, reproduced in the works of a number of prominent Kyiv Theological Academy (KTA) representatives from the second half of t... see more


Joseph R. Shafer    

The recent call for a critical university studies from the American Studies Association speaks to a growing body of criticism about university corporatism, specifically its "colonialization" through, and production of, student-debt. The subject centraliz... see more


Sourit Bhattacharya, Arka Chattopadhyay    

In the last decades, there has begun a close and productive dialogue between humanities studies and environment and disaster studies. This has arisen from the general understanding in academic and policy-making circles that the problem of environment cri... see more


Mostafa Nadim,Esmate Babadi    

Diseases and their recovery processes were usual issues between people and different clans. Gradually, people could provide better and deeper treatment according to their experience and academic studies. In Qajar era, Treatment based on the traditional w... see more


Asghar Montazerghaem,Masoud Kasiri,zeinab Ahmadvand,Fatemeh Alian    

Obstetrics and Gynecology as one of the most important branches of modern medicine, enjoys a thousand-year history of the views of scientists and physicians of various civilizations of India, Greece, Iran and other nations. This field of study from ancie... see more