Treffer: Developing Transdisciplinary Language Courses and Collaborations Using Higher Education's Institutional Analytics

Title:
Developing Transdisciplinary Language Courses and Collaborations Using Higher Education's Institutional Analytics
Language:
English
Authors:
Source:
Journal of Second Language Acquisition and Teaching. 2025 31:1-12.
Availability:
Arizona Board of Regents for the University of Arizona Interdisciplinary Ph.D. Program in Second Language Acquisition and Teaching and University of Arizona Libraries. 1510 East University Boulevard. Tucson, AZ 85721. e-mail: lbry-journals@email.arizona.edu; Web site: https://journals.librarypublishing.arizona.edu/jslat/
Peer Reviewed:
Y
Page Count:
12
Publication Date:
2025
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift Journal Articles<br />Reports - Descriptive
Education Level:
Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
ISSN:
2689-8195
Entry Date:
2025
Accession Number:
EJ1489458
Database:
ERIC

Weitere Informationen

Within higher education, there is campus-wide discourse increasingly calling for preparing graduates for a globalized world, internationalizing the curriculum, and building international partnerships. Yet, some of the departments -- notably language programs -- are absent in the discussion regarding solutions and allocated funds (Tardy, 2015; Warner, 2011). Despite this disconnect, there remains a critical need for the transcultural competencies, multilingual abilities, and a globalized perspective that are frequently incorporated into language learning courses in higher education. As one way of addressing this, there is a continued call for transdisciplinary approaches and collaboration in SLA research (Douglas Fir Group, 2016) and transdisciplinary course offerings (Modern Language Association, 2007). These suggestions coincide with continued conversations and underlying pressing concerns among language programs in HEIs that they increase or maintain student enrollment to persist in an increasingly market-oriented approach to education. This paper seeks to address these looming issues by highlighting data analytics use from other higher education fields (e.g., student success and retention efforts) into different programmatic and transdisciplinary curricular models as a solution to the challenge of offering cross-disciplinary language courses that increase student enrollment.

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