First-year students' conflicts during their construction of an academic identity in English as a foreign language: Implementing Cultural-Historical Activity Theory

Authors

  • Angels Oliva-Girbau Dept. Did. Ll, Lit i CCSS, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Abstract

This paper constructs a theoretical framework  that views academic writing from a context-based perspective.   The shift  from text to context results from implementating the  concept of activity system into the academic community, envisioning academia as the sum of the interactions among its  components (users, tools, goals and results), which was applied into an instrumental English course for first-year students through reflective activities that promoted awareness and discussion of the components of the academic community during students'  inititiation. We analyse the results of the first one of these activities, a questionnaire students answered as part of the classwork. Their replies to this questionnaire show lack of awareness of the components of the academic activity system, one of the sources of the conflicts they experience during their initiation into the academy. Finally, we suggest a new approach to writing instruction that involves the convergence of research and instruction.

 

Keywords

Activity systems, Cultural Historical Activity Theory, academic genres, academic identity, context

Published

2011-10-01

How to Cite

Oliva-Girbau, A. (2011). First-year students’ conflicts during their construction of an academic identity in English as a foreign language: Implementing Cultural-Historical Activity Theory. Bellaterra Journal of Teaching & Learning Language & Literature, 4(3), 38–52. https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/jtl3.421

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