ESP & EAP
Faranak Nabi; Mohammad Reza Khodadust; Nader Asadi Aydinlou
Abstract
This mixed-methods study investigated the communicative competence and communicative strategies employed by Iranian English for Specific Purposes (ESP) students and teachers, a context where curricula often prioritize linguistic knowledge over interactive proficiency. Data were collected from 150 Master ...
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This mixed-methods study investigated the communicative competence and communicative strategies employed by Iranian English for Specific Purposes (ESP) students and teachers, a context where curricula often prioritize linguistic knowledge over interactive proficiency. Data were collected from 150 Master of Arts (MA) engineering students and ten ESP instructors using a communicative competence questionnaire and audio-recorded classroom observations. The observations were transcribed and coded using an established taxonomy of communicative strategies, which demonstrated high inter-rater reliability. The results revealed a difference wherein students reported strong self-perceived interpersonal skills but exhibited significant difficulties in conversational smoothness and comfort. Analysis of classroom interactions showed that students relied predominantly on compensatory strategies, with a heavy use of code-switching, while teachers primarily used stalling strategies. A significant difference was found in the strategic patterns between the two groups, and more complex strategies like circumlocution were absent among the students. The findings point to a critical misalignment between students’ sociocultural confidence and their strategic repertoire, underscoring a systemic neglect of oral proficiency and strategy training. The study concludes that a curricular shift toward explicit strategy instruction and authentic communicative practice is urgently needed in Iranian ESP education.
ESP & EAP
Masoud Azadnia
Abstract
Although generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) is reshaping language education globally, its integration into English for Specific Purposes (ESP) instruction in Iran has remained limited by rigid curricula, restricted autonomy, and lack of authentic, discipline-specific resources. This study sought ...
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Although generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) is reshaping language education globally, its integration into English for Specific Purposes (ESP) instruction in Iran has remained limited by rigid curricula, restricted autonomy, and lack of authentic, discipline-specific resources. This study sought to address this gap by developing a contextualized co-design framework to align AI affordances with local pedagogical realities. Guided by theoretical triangulation, a hybrid methodology was employed that combined design-based research, co-design, and participatory qualitative approaches. The needs analysis phase involved twenty-six ESP stakeholders, including eight instructors and eighteen learners. In-depth interviews were then conducted with a subset of nineteen participants—eight instructors and eleven learners. Three instructors and three learners, chosen purposively among those involved in both prior phases, along with three policymakers and three AI experts, participated in the last co-design phase to ensure multiple perspectives in model development. As revealed by the findings, the learners prioritized personalization, writing support, and disciplinary adaptability, whereas the instructors emphasized controlled prompting, ethical literacy, and assessment redesign. Concerns shared between the two groups included overreliance, epistemic authority, and unequal digital access. The co-design process generated a cyclical instructional model incorporating dual human-check mechanisms, ethical self-reporting, bias-awareness checkpoints, multimodal feedback loops, and institutionalized teacher training. Offering a theoretically grounded and adaptable reference for discipline-specific AI use in ESP programs, this study’s framework can guide educators, curriculum designers, and policymakers in ESP contexts analogous to those investigated in this research.