One decade of “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI) in healthcare education

IntroductionThis paper analyzes published healthcare studies about “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI), indexed in the Scopus database from 2013 to 2022.MethodsThe author used published criteria of systematic reviews and limited the findings to healthcare education using several key terms; th...

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Published in:Frontiers in Medicine
Main Author: Munassir Alhamami
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2024-02-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2024.1296563/full
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author Munassir Alhamami
author_facet Munassir Alhamami
author_sort Munassir Alhamami
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description IntroductionThis paper analyzes published healthcare studies about “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI), indexed in the Scopus database from 2013 to 2022.MethodsThe author used published criteria of systematic reviews and limited the findings to healthcare education using several key terms; this returned 137 articles. The author then downloaded and carefully read the articles. The majority of articles (102) were deleted because they did not meet the selection criteria discussed in the methods section, thus the final list comprised 35 research studies. Next, the author analyzed the articles’ bibliometric indexes, such as author, funding information, context, research instruments, years of publication, place of publication, and citations. In addition, the key findings and recommendations of these studies were presented.Results and discussionMost of the studies assessed were conducted in the last five years in Arabic speaking countries by non-language specialists, and the language of instruction was not the main focus of the studies. The studies were most often about attitudes of students, and used quantitative methods such as questionnaires. The results show diverse and conflicted results such as positive impacts and positive attitudes in some cases, negative impacts and attitudes in others, and preferences for either monolingual or bilingual approaches. The findings demonstrate the need for experimental and rigorous mixed methods studies that involve different stakeholders and are conducted by both applied linguists and healthcare education specialists. Future research should move beyond student attitudes and utilize rigorous mixed methods involving researchers from both linguistics and healthcare education to deepen our understanding of EMI’s complex impact in diverse contexts.
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spelling doaj-art-2e2e63ffdf3f4b2d97f1d7fee00920f62025-08-20T00:44:25ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Medicine2296-858X2024-02-011110.3389/fmed.2024.12965631296563One decade of “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI) in healthcare educationMunassir AlhamamiIntroductionThis paper analyzes published healthcare studies about “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI), indexed in the Scopus database from 2013 to 2022.MethodsThe author used published criteria of systematic reviews and limited the findings to healthcare education using several key terms; this returned 137 articles. The author then downloaded and carefully read the articles. The majority of articles (102) were deleted because they did not meet the selection criteria discussed in the methods section, thus the final list comprised 35 research studies. Next, the author analyzed the articles’ bibliometric indexes, such as author, funding information, context, research instruments, years of publication, place of publication, and citations. In addition, the key findings and recommendations of these studies were presented.Results and discussionMost of the studies assessed were conducted in the last five years in Arabic speaking countries by non-language specialists, and the language of instruction was not the main focus of the studies. The studies were most often about attitudes of students, and used quantitative methods such as questionnaires. The results show diverse and conflicted results such as positive impacts and positive attitudes in some cases, negative impacts and attitudes in others, and preferences for either monolingual or bilingual approaches. The findings demonstrate the need for experimental and rigorous mixed methods studies that involve different stakeholders and are conducted by both applied linguists and healthcare education specialists. Future research should move beyond student attitudes and utilize rigorous mixed methods involving researchers from both linguistics and healthcare education to deepen our understanding of EMI’s complex impact in diverse contexts.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2024.1296563/fullhealthcare educationEnglish as a medium of instruction (EMI)medical educationlanguage of instructionhigher education
spellingShingle Munassir Alhamami
One decade of “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI) in healthcare education
healthcare education
English as a medium of instruction (EMI)
medical education
language of instruction
higher education
title One decade of “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI) in healthcare education
title_full One decade of “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI) in healthcare education
title_fullStr One decade of “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI) in healthcare education
title_full_unstemmed One decade of “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI) in healthcare education
title_short One decade of “English as a medium of instruction” (EMI) in healthcare education
title_sort one decade of english as a medium of instruction emi in healthcare education
topic healthcare education
English as a medium of instruction (EMI)
medical education
language of instruction
higher education
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2024.1296563/full
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