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Review of doctoral research in English language education in the Philippines, Singapore and Malaysia (2007–2010)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2011

Rani Rubdy
Affiliation:
T. Ruanni F. Tupas
Affiliation:
Corazon D. Villareal
Affiliation:
Maya Khemlani David
Affiliation:
Francisco Perlas Dumanig
Affiliation:

Abstract

This review highlights recent doctoral research in English language education and related areas completed between 2007 and 2010 in three countries in Southeast Asia: Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines. Out of sixty dissertations initially chosen from major universities in these countries, five from the Philippines, four from Malaysia and three from Singapore were selected for review, the selection being based mainly on their quality of work and representation of key areas of intellectual work in the field in these countries. This review shows how the shared postcolonial identities of these countries and their unique sociohistorical locations help explain the coalescing and diverging agendas and trajectories in English language education doctoral research in the region. Much of the work affirms the dominant intellectual position of the West as the producer of knowledge, so there is a need to reposition the intellectual stance of research in English language education in the region within and emerging from its multilingual but unequally globalizing landscapes. Thus, there is an urgent need for more nuanced attention to socio-cultural factors that impact on English language education in the three countries under review, which, in turn, can help scholars produce new knowledge that can contribute to academic conversations in the field.

Type
Surveys of Ph.D. Theses
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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