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Discursive conflicts in news media and the suspension of a government-led test of English in Korea

Authors
Shin, D.Cho, E.
Issue Date
16-Jun-2020
Publisher
Springer
Keywords
Critical discourse analysis; Discursive conflicts; Evaluative state; High-stakes testing; National English Ability Test (NEAT); Neoliberalism
Citation
Language Testing in Asia, v.10, no.1
Journal Title
Language Testing in Asia
Volume
10
Number
1
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/42957
DOI
10.1186/s40468-020-00100-7
ISSN
2229-0443
2229-0443
Abstract
Drawing on critical discourse analysis methodologies, this study examines the discursive conflicts and strategies employed by newspaper media surrounding the National English Ability Test (NEAT) in Korea. NEAT was reported to cause severe competition among young learners of English and lacked public support. Discursive conflicts over whether NEAT would be legitimized flourished in the media. In this study, the discursive practices adopted by both proponents and opponents of NEAT in two leading Korean newspapers of different political orientations—Chosun Ilbo and Hankyoreh—were analyzed from 2006 to 2016. Over this decade, there were three periods of transformation: creation, expansion, and extinction. During the creation period, the discursive conflict focused on the TOEFL crisis in Korea, expansion on the implementation of NEAT, and extinction on its abolition. From creation to abolition, there were competing rationales for developing, suspending, or abolishing NEAT. This study investigated the underlying orientations (neoliberal and evaluative state) of the two newspapers and found that they examined the pros and cons of using the test. Moreover, the government’s implementation of high-stakes testing and its attempt to reward those who complied and to curb the private education sector stresses market-friendly state interaction, which accordingly perpetuates neoliberal conditions. © 2020, The Author(s).
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Shin, Dong Il
인문대학 (영어영문학과)
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