Achilleas Kostoulas

Applied Linguistics & Language Teacher Education

Tag: Higher Education

  • Language Policy in Higher Education

    Language Policy in Higher Education

    WORKSHOP: Universities are sites where local languages, standard national languages, and English as a global language come into contact. What does this mean in terms of language policy?

  • The Lingua controversy

    The Lingua controversy

    You have probably read about the mass resignation of all the editorial board and the reviewers of Lingua, a prestigious journal published by Elsevier [in November 2015]. For those of you who may have missed it, here are some highlights. What happened? Last July, the editors of Lingua asked Elsevier to renegotiate the way the journal worked.…

  • Are there limits to what one can talk about?

    Are there limits to what one can talk about?

    Much of my online reading this week focused on the question of freedom of speech, and whether there should be qualifications to this right. This was prompted by the Counter-Terrorism and Security bill, which attempts to regulate speech at universities (You can read more about this in the first section of this post). But as I…

  • UK lecturers in the Greek government; open peer review; and Harry Potter marketing

    UK lecturers in the Greek government; open peer review; and Harry Potter marketing

    About this post: This is a collection of news and articles about Higher Education and language teaching, which appeared in 2015. This week’s collection of stories, articles and blog posts about higher education, looks into topics ranging from the influence of British universities on Greek politics to the influence of Harry Potter novels on higher education…

  • Paying for peer review; Nobel laureates on Raif Badawi; & dealing with retractions

    Paying for peer review; Nobel laureates on Raif Badawi; & dealing with retractions

    This post is a collection of articles about ELT, language learning and Higher Education, which appeared in the second week of January 2015. In this week’s collection of articles, I would like to invite you to reflect on the following questions: New open-access journal promises to pay peer reviewers According to an article in the…

  • How are we encouraging predatory publishers?

    How are we encouraging predatory publishers?

    Recently, Scholarly Open Access, an authoritative blog that tracks the activity of predatory publishers, issued a warning (link no longer active) about The International Journal of English Language, Literature & Humanities (I used to have a link to them as well, but I decided they don’t deserve one), a fraudulent journal that seems to target ELT professionals.…

  • Making college free, a new OA journal, and student visas

    Making college free, a new OA journal, and student visas

    About this post: This is a summary of blog posts, articles and other content about Higher Education, language teaching and learning and academic writing that appeared online in the first week of January 2015. I am not sure whether it was a mere coincidence or if it is somehow connected to the New Year, but…

  • King’s London, bogus science, author mills, and predatory publishers

    King’s London, bogus science, author mills, and predatory publishers

    About this post: This is a weekly roundup of blog posts, online articles and other content about Higher Education, language teaching and learning and academic writing that appeared online in December 2015.

  • What’s hot in science; academic blogging; and a paper by Maggie Simpson

    What’s hot in science; academic blogging; and a paper by Maggie Simpson

    In case you’re looking for inspiration for your next research project, in this week’s collection of noteworthy articles, I provide a list to the hottest fields in science. There are also some thoughts on how to discuss one’s blog to potentially sceptical peers, a story on linguistic discrimination and a narrative about the difficulties involved in correcting…

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com