Sites of belonging: Fluctuating and entangled emotions at a UAE English-medium university

Document Type

Article

Source of Publication

Linguistics and Education

Publication Date

1-1-2023

Abstract

English-medium education in multilingual university settings (EMEMUS) hosts a complex concoction of emotions amongst stakeholders. English-medium instruction (EMI) dominates higher education in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). For students, EMI creates both affordances and pressures resulting in pride, confidence, anxiety, guilt, shame, and (un)belonging. For university teachers, navigating EMEMUS can be an ‘emotion-laden process’ involving shifting identities, energy-intensive teaching methodologies, intercultural demands and ‘emotional labor’. This article presents findings from a phenomenological case study involving ten transnational university teachers and 110 Emirati undergraduate students at a UAE EMEMUS. Through metalinguistic reflections, participants discussed emotions and levels of belonging. Thematic analysis of the data revealed shifting positionalities which led to complex and entangled emotions. Intersecting identity aspects such as English proficiency, linguistic background, and language ideologies influenced emotional experiences. The article argues for greater recognition of stakeholders’ emotional labor and sociolinguistic lived realities rather than a one-size-fits-all approach to EMI.

ISSN

0898-5898

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Disciplines

Arts and Humanities | Linguistics

Keywords

Belonging, Emotional labor, Emotions, English-medium instruction (EMI), Phenomenology, United Arab Emirates (UAE)

Scopus ID

85149659479

Indexed in Scopus

yes

Open Access

no

Share

COinS