2015
DOI: 10.7575/aiac.alls.v.7n.1p.21
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Language Choice and Use of Malaysian Public University Lecturers in the Education Domain

Abstract: It is a norm for people from a multilingual and multicultural country such as Malaysia to speak at least two or more languages. Thus, the Malaysian multilingual situation resulted in speakers having to make decisions about which languages are to be used for different purposes in different domains. In order to explain the phenomenon of language choice, Fishman domain analysis (1964) was adapted into this research. According to Fishman's domain analysis, language choice and use may depend on the speaker's experi… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Conversely, the participants in this study used Urdu and English in the education domain, whereas Pashto and other languages were the least used languages. The findings agree with Mei et al (2016); they asserted that the English and Malay languages were used by the Chinese, Indian and Malay respondents in Malaysia in the education domain. Simultaneously, some Chinese informants reported that they would like to use Chinese in the education domain.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Conversely, the participants in this study used Urdu and English in the education domain, whereas Pashto and other languages were the least used languages. The findings agree with Mei et al (2016); they asserted that the English and Malay languages were used by the Chinese, Indian and Malay respondents in Malaysia in the education domain. Simultaneously, some Chinese informants reported that they would like to use Chinese in the education domain.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…A study by Mei et al (2016) investigated language preference trends and showed how language preference in education differs among sub-domains. Language ability, ethnicity, gender, and field of study also impact choice and utilization.…”
Section: Bilingualism and Multilingualismmentioning
confidence: 99%