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The Identity of the Professional Interpreter: How Professional Identities are Constructed in the Classroom

Autor Alan James Runcieman
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 feb 2019
This monograph examines how higher education(HE) institutions construct ‘professional identities’ in the classroom, specifically how dominant discourses in institutions frame the social role, requisite skills and character required to practice a profession, and how students navigate these along their academic trajectories. This book is based on a longitudinal case study of a prestigious HE institution specialising in training professional interpreters.  

Adopting an innovative research approach, it investigates a community of aspiring professionals in a HE context by drawing on small story narrative analysis from an ethnographic perspective to provide emic insights into the student community and the development of their social identities. The findings (contextualised by examining the curricula of similar institutions worldwide) suggest that interpreter institutions might not be providing students with a clear and comprehensive picture of the interpreterprofession, and not responding to its increasingly complex role in today’s society.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789811356773
ISBN-10: 9811356777
Pagini: 184
Ilustrații: XVI, 184 p. 2 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Ediția:Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore

Cuprins

Researching HE Institutions for Professional Training.- The History of Interpreting as a Profession.- Narrative Research and Ethnography.- Carrying out Research in the Field.- Principal Themes.- Data Analysis: Teacher Talk about Interpreting.- Data Analysis: Language Levels and Interpreting.- Data Analysis: Students and the Institution.- A Summary of the Principal Findings.- Improving and Extending Research in the Field.


Notă biografică

Dr. Alan James Runcieman is currently an adjunct professor at the Department for Interpreters and Translators,University of Bologna, Italy. His principle research interests lie in the fields of narrative research, ethnography, interpreter training, intercultural communication, phonetics and phonology and World Englishes.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This monograph examines how higher education(HE) institutions construct ‘professional identities’ in the classroom, specifically how dominant discourses in institutions frame the social role, requisite skills and character required to practice a profession, and how students navigate these along their academic trajectories. This book is based on a longitudinal case study of a prestigious HE institution specialising in training professional interpreters.  

Adopting an innovative research approach, it investigates a community of aspiring professionals in a HE context by drawing on small story narrative analysis from an ethnographic perspective to provide emic insights into the student community and the development of their social identities. The findings (contextualised by examining the curricula of similar institutions worldwide) suggest that interpreter institutions might not be providing students with a clear and comprehensive picture of the interpreterprofession, and not responding to its increasingly complex role in today’s society.

Caracteristici

Bridges the gap between the educational world of professional training, and the world of the profession itself Analyses and critiques dominant discourses in an institution by comparing them to the actual world of work and the changes that have occurred there Investigates how students percieve and construct their identities in relation to discourses in the institution and the consequent imagined identity of the future professional they aspire to become