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-List Of Titles -Evidence of improvement in accounting students' communication skills

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/133093

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Title
Evidence of improvement in accounting students' communication skills
Related
International journal of educational management, Vol. 25, No. 4, (2011), p.311-327
DOI
10.1108/09513541111136612
Publisher
Emerald Group Publishing
Date
2011
FoR/RFCD Code(s)
130300 Specialist Studies in Education
Author/Creator
Evans, Elaine
Author/Creator
Cable, Dawn
Description
Purpose – With large numbers of overseas students enrolled in university accounting courses in Australia, there is a growing trend in the postgraduate accounting courses to approach the problem of language and communication difficulties by offering discipline-specific language training through an embedded curriculum approach in collaboration with English language specialists. This raises a general question about the nature of evidence required to demonstrate that students' professional language skills have been enhanced by these interdisciplinary programs. The paper aims to address the basic question: what evidence is available about the effectiveness of programs that align English language with disciplinary teaching? Design/methodology/approach – The purpose of the paper is to review existing research to discover the nature of evidence that is available to address the effectiveness of programs that align English language with disciplinary teaching. Findings – In the area of accounting research, it is very difficult to unbundle the effects of improvement in communication skills from improved understanding of discipline content. Research limitations/implications – At a subject level, language interventions could pay more attention to the attributes of “good” evidence, while at a program level a suite of data sources may support a persuasive argument for improvement in students' communication skills. Practical implications – If associations between integration and language improvement can be established through quantitative and qualitative research methods and reliable evidence for this can be presented to educational policy makers, then interdisciplinary approaches may be seen as valid alternatives to the more readily available (and cheaper) “bolt-on programs” at university-wide levels, where language support is given separately from discipline content. Originality/value – The research addressed the question of whether there is evidence of the effectiveness of initiatives that align English language with disciplinary teaching in accounting. The answer is “yes”. It was gathered from a variety of research methods including experimentation, use of available data, diagnostic tests and self reporting by students and staff. What is apparent from the collected evidence is the effectiveness of interdisciplinary approaches that integrate language support and accounting content.
Description
17 page(s)
Subject Keyword
130300 Specialist Studies in Education
Subject Keyword
accounting education
Subject Keyword
Australia
Subject Keyword
communication skills
Subject Keyword
English language
Subject Keyword
evidence
Subject Keyword
students
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Accounting and Corporate Governance

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/133093
Identifier
ISSN:0951-354X
Identifier
mq-rm-2010006362
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
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Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"International journal of educational management"
 
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Cable, Dawn
accounting education

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