Looking at both English Medium Instruction (EMI) and multimodality in higher education, this edited volume bridges the gap between the two contexts by offering various new insights into fundamentals in multilingual education, EMI discourse and current teaching practices in internationalised contexts. Current demands in communication, especially in higher-education contexts, require examining EMI from a multimodal perspective with the aim of giving explicit attention to modern discourse practices.
The contributors reflect on the principles guiding EMI and multimodality and their application in higher education using both practical examples and data-driven evidences. They discuss EMI multimodal discourse from an empirical perspective to unveil communicative practices in internationalised higher-education contexts; and exemplify classroom applications and ESP and EAP pedagogical practices that promote multimodal competence in higher education. The contributors provide solid theoretical foundations, key principles, research evidence and pedagogical implications that inform current methodologies and practices for EMI, ESP and EAP, as well as multimodality in higher education.
This volume on EMI and multimodality in higher education will have broad appeal for researchers worldwide from various fields of expertise within education and applied linguistics.
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págs. 9-25
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págs. 48-70
págs. 71-95
The role of multimodal competence in ‘doing EMI lecturing’: Exploring the effectiveness of non-linguistic resources in EMI
págs. 96-129
A proposal for CLIL teacher training: Acknowledging multimodal literacies as pedagogical affordances in CLILicised Physical Education
págs. 130-151
Strategic translanguaging and trans-semiotizing in an English for academic purposes class: A multimodal analysis
págs. 155-183
Preparing doctoral students for conference presentations: Teaching multimodal academic literacy and the role of organizational metadiscourse
págs. 184-201
págs. 202-224
Digital multimodal composing in the teaching of English for business communication: A genre-based analysis of student-authored videos
págs. 225-246
The wood and the trees: Evaluating multimodality in English-medium higher education through the ROAD-MAPPING lens
págs. 249-259
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