Abstract

Globalisation and technological advances have contributed greatly to increasing mobility in higher education (HE). One of the main stakeholders in this process are lecturers, for whom internationalisation is often understood as simply the use of a lingua franca—usually English—in their teaching (then known as English medium instruction, EMI) to the detriment of other key factors such as intercultural competence. The present study focuses on the analysis of a specific in-service training module intended to develop the intercultural communicative competence (ICC) of a group of 21 Spanish lecturers working at two public universities. Adopting an empirical approach, we specifically aim to contrast the participants’ beliefs about their own ICC before and after taking the training course. Adopting a mixed-method approach, two data gathering processes were used prior to and after the training: questionnaire and self-reflection report. The results show that before the training participants were willing to learn but mostly unaware of the importance of ICC. Once trained, many of them seem to have become aware that EMI goes beyond language issues and that there is a crucial need to work on the intercultural component to fully develop HE internationalisation. Furthermore, this study highlights the need for major changes in in-service training courses as well as in language policies for EMI in order to give ICC the presence it should have.

Highlights

  • Lecturers are one of the main stakeholders in the steady process of internationalisation that universities are undergoing

  • For the sake of clarity, this section has been divided into two subsections relating to each of the two data-gathering methods: section 4.1 deals with the questionnaires and answers the first research question, section 4.2 on the analysis of the self-reflective reports written by the participants with special emphasis placed on the second research question

  • The aim of this study was to contrast the participants’ beliefs about their intercultural competence before and after taking a course related to the topic as part of an EMI in-service training course

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Summary

Introduction

Lecturers are one of the main stakeholders in the steady process of internationalisation that universities are undergoing. Many institutions merely demand stakeholders (teachers, students, staff) to certify a specific level of English (this varies across institutions) to conduct their international lessons in English (aka English medium instruction, EMI) and pay no heed to other key factors such as intercultural communicative competence (ICC) (see Dafouz and Smit 2020). Keeping the above in mind, the present study focuses on the analysis of specific training intended to develop the ICC of lecturers from different disciplines engaged in this new teaching scenario. It adopts a mixedmethod approach combining both a quantitative and qualitative analysis

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