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Dive into the research topics where Tony William Walker is active.

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Featured researches published by Tony William Walker.


Asia Pacific Journal of Education | 2015

TESOL professional standards in the “Asian century”: dilemmas facing Australian TESOL teacher education

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Tony William Walker; Parlo Singh

Australian teacher education programmes that prepare teachers of English to speakers of other languages (TESOL) are confronting the nexus of two facets of globalization: transformations in the Asian region, captured in the notion of the “Asian century”, and shifting conceptions of professionalism in TESOL in non-compulsory education. In booming Asian economies, English language learning is integral to the demand for high-quality education. This has produced increases in TESOL Teacher Education Programme (TTEP) enrolments of both domestic Australian students and international students from Asia. Growth in demand for TTEPs has necessitated that they cater to student diversity, and the intended contexts of practice. This demand has coincided with a concurrent movement towards professional standards for TESOL that, we argue, confronts complexities around quality, accountability, and professional identity and achieving conceptual and contextual coherence. Drawing on discourses of managerialism and performativity, this paper explores tensions between increased student demands for TTEPs, professional standards discourses which are part of the global policy discourses on teacher quality, and the achievement of programmatic conceptual and contextual coherence from the perspective of Australian TTEPs.


Language Culture and Curriculum | 2015

Accommodating Taboo Language in English Language Teaching: Issues of Appropriacy and Authenticity.

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Tony William Walker; Brendan John Bartlett; Xuhong Guo

Culturally specific language practices related to vernacular uses of taboo language such as swearing represent a socially communicative minefield for learners of English. The role of classroom learning experiences to prepare learners for negotiation of taboo language use in social interactions is correspondingly complicated and ignored in much of the language teaching research literature. English language teachers confront not only obstacles to effective development of sociolinguistic and cultural knowledge in classroom instruction, and failure of course-books to address taboo language, but also uncertainties they themselves have about addressing such obstacles and omissions. In this paper, we draw on interview data from three experienced teachers of English as an additional language, to explore their perceptions and classroom practices in relation to taboo language. In particular, we explore the situational appropriateness of mild taboo swearing using the lexical item, bloody, which has a strong positioning in Australian language culture. Dilemmas surrounding this potentially troublesome item of Australian English are foregrounded in relation to the extent to which often neglected, but widely used taboo language is actually ‘taboo’ in the classroom.


Archive | 2014

Accommodating Asian Eap Practices Within Postgraduate Teacher Education

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Tony William Walker

A powerful discourse in the contemporary world connects the dominance of the West and education. Perceptions of educational standards and institutions of the English-speaking West as superior have synonymized a Western education with opportunities to achieve aspirations of economic growth and prosperity (Gray, 2010).


International Journal of Pedagogies and Learning | 2016

Ethnolinguistic diversity within Australian schools: call for a participant perspective in teacher learning

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Parlo Singh; Tony William Walker

Abstract Enactment of policy on diversity and learning in Australian schools is evident in “diversity talk” in daily discourses of school teachers. From policy documents to daily staffroom conversations, there is extensive use in contemporary Western educational discourse of ethnolinguistic categories. The categorization of students to groups on the basis of cultural and linguistic attributes can potentially be counter-productive to school learning and broader practices of intercultural understanding. In this paper we critique policy-derived categorizations in Australia that encourage teachers’ perceptions of themselves as outside, rather than as participants in, the dynamic interplay of variables that characterize contemporary society. We call for increased opportunities in teacher education and teacher professional development in the areas of cultural identity and shifting cultural ethnoscapes as a basis for contextually responsive and pedagogically viable enactment of procedures and practices mandated by current policy settings with the aim of students from ethnolinguistically diverse backgrounds achieving their potential as participants in the broader community.


Archive | 2014

English for Academic Purposes (EAP) in Asia: negotiating appropriate practices in a global context

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Tony William Walker

The adoption of English as the language of study and scholarship is becoming increasingly common among universities across Asia. But does this adoption of the English language not also mean the adoption of Western approaches to scholarship and knowledge? This most timely and important book critically examines how EAP practitioners can negotiate between Western and Asian academic practices and approaches to knowledge and scholarship and is essential reading for anyone involved in international education.


Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching | 2015

Assessment policies, curricular directives, and teacher agency: Quandaries of EFL teachers in Inner Mongolia

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Brendan John Bartlett; Tony William Walker; Xuhong Guo


Affirming language diversity in schools and society: beyond linguistic apartheid | 2014

English for academic purposes: a trojan horse bearing the advance forces of linguistic domination?

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Tony William Walker


Contextualizing the pedagogy of English as an international language: Issues and tensions | 2013

Cultural Concepts and EIL: The Case of the Republic of Kiribati

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Tony William Walker


Global language policies and local educational practices and cultures | 2016

Uncertainty and reluctance in teaching taboo language: a case study of an experienced teacher of English as an additional language

Xuhong Guo; Indika Jananda Liyanage; Brendan John Bartlett; Tony William Walker; Adriana Diaz


English for academic purposes (EAP) in Asia : negotiating appropriate practices in a global context | 2014

Accommodating Asian EAP Practices within Postgraduate Teacher Education: Perspectives from Australia

Indika Jananda Liyanage; Tony William Walker

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Brendan John Bartlett

Australian Catholic University

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Xuhong Guo

Inner Mongolia Normal University

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Adriana Diaz

University of Queensland

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