Representing the other: the case of an academic literacy course in an engineering faculty

  • Emmanuel Mgqwashu University of KwaZulu-Natal
  • Annah Bengesai University of KwaZulu-Natal

Abstract

Drawing from the construct of legitimate peripheral participation (Lave and Wenger,1991)) and Gees (1996) trope of d/Discourses, concepts which locate learning in the socio-cultural interactions and co-participation between students and the more experienced people in disciplinary knowledge, this paper explores the dominant representations of academic literacy and of students in an engineering faculty. These representations were examined through the eyes of 24 engineering students, 2 engineering academics and 11 language tutors teaching a Technical Communication for Engineering course. Emerging representations are highlighted and these point to disjunctures between engineering students understanding of the role of academic literacy, language tutors conceptions of their role in the development of academic literacy and engineering academics understanding of the epistemic relation between academic literacy and engineering practice. While these representations are not necessarily negative, some discourses that arise can potentially exclude social agents (both students and academics) from effectively participating in the teaching and/or acquisition of academic literacy.
Published
2016-01-12
How to Cite
Mgqwashu, Emmanuel, and Annah Bengesai. 2016. “Representing the Other: The Case of an Academic Literacy Course in an Engineering Faculty”. South African Journal of Higher Education 28 (1). https://doi.org/10.20853/28-1-332.
Section
General Articles