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University Instructor Agency in GenAI–Supported ELT Writing Instruction: Practices and Perceived Challenges in Under-Resourced Asia–Pacific Contexts (101838)

Session Information:

Session: On Demand
Room: Virtual Video Presentation
Presentation Type:Virtual Presentation

All presentation times are UTC + 2 (Europe/Paris)

The university instructors’ agency in Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) integration in English Language Teaching (ELT) is still at an experimental stage, particularly in developing countries where training facilities, technological access and pedagogical adaptation remain uneven. While global research on GenAI-enhanced language education is expanding, limited attention has been paid to how university-level English teachers in under-resourced Asia–Pacific contexts navigate and adapt to these emerging tools. This study addresses this gap by exploring how Bangladeshi university-level English instructors’ agency in GenAI to facilitate first-year writing instruction, infusing two theoretical frameworks: the Postmethod Pedagogy and the TPACK model. Using a qualitative design, structured individual interviews were conducted with ten university English instructors, experimenting with GenAI-assisted teaching for the first time. Thematic findings include: (i) teachers exercised agency by using GenAI as receptive, assistive, and collaborative tools to enhance writing instruction; (ii) GenAI-generated materials were customized to learners’ cognitive, linguistic, and cultural needs; (iii) GenAI supported reflective and adaptive teaching practices; (iv) it promoted learner autonomy and engagement through exemplars and formative feedback; and (v) challenges persisted, including limited GenAI literacy, inadequate institutional policy, unequal resources, and generational resistance. While integration remains experimental, these findings highlight the potential of GenAI to enrich ELT. By offering a glocal perspective, the study informs the sustainable, contextual adoption of GenAI in English language instruction. It underscores the need to bridge the gap between GenAI policies emerging from Global North contexts and their practical, context-sensitive implementation in the under-resourced Global South, particularly within Asia–Pacific countries.

Authors:
Mohammad Uddin, University of Alabama, United States
Faria Ansaree, University of Alabama, United States


About the Presenter(s)
Mohammad Mohi Uddin is a Doctoral Student and Graduate Research Assistant, College of Education; Graduate Senator, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA. His research interests include English literature, Generative AI, and pedagogy.

Connect on Linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohammad-mohi-uddin-a1391828b/

Connect on ResearchGate
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Mohammad-Uddin-162

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Posted by James Alexander Gordon

Last updated: 2023-02-23 23:45:00