Chapter 1. English Language Teaching in Moroccan Higher Education: An Introduction (Hassan Belhiah).- Part 1: English: Evolution and Spread.- Chapter 2. The Making of an English Department (1975-1982): A Personal Account (Hassan Mekouar).- Chapter 3. English as a Global Language in Morocco: A Qualitative study of Students' Motivations for Studying English (Hassan Belhiah).- Chapter 4. Reflections on the Evolution of the LMD Reform: The English Department as a Case Study (Yamina El Kirat El Allame).- Part 2: Motivation towards English.- Chapter 5. English as an Alternative Cultural Capital for University EFL Students in Morocco (Adil Azhar).- Chapter 6. University Teachers' Perspectives on Adopting EMI in Morocco (Youssef Nadri).- Chapter 7. L2 Motivational Self and English Department Students' Intended Effort (Nourddine Amrous).- Chapter 8. Motivations, Attitudes and Introspections of Moroccan Undergraduate Students towards Major Selection (Abdellatif Bouhlal).- Part 3: Teaching Practices.- Chapter 9. Beliefs on English Language Teaching Effectiveness in Moroccan Higher Education (Amina Ichbah).- Chapter 10. Teaching Translation to Moroccan University Students: Challenges and Perspectives (Abderrazak Gharafi).- Chapter 11. Final Year Research Supervision in the English Department: Attributes, Challenges, and Supervisory Practices (Ikbal Zeddari).- Part 4: Curricular Innovations.- Chapter 12. A Citizenship Approach to Learning and Engagement in Moroccan Higher Education (Said Zaidoune).- Chapter 13. Teaching/Learning English through Digitalized Curricula: Challenges and Prospects (Mohamed Dellal).- Part 5: Challenges and Future Prospects.- Chapter 14. Challenges to the Mission of the English Department in Morocco (Hssein Khtou).- Chapter 15. Scientific Research and Human National Development in Moroccan Universities: An Empirical and Attitudinal Assessment of Status-Quo and Challenges from a Postgraduate Perspective (Abdelghani Ennam).- Chapter 16. The Challenges and Future of the English Department in Neoliberal Morocco (Jamal Bahmad).
About the Author: Hassan Belhiah holds a PhD (2005) in English from the University of Wisconsin in Madison and is currently an Associate Professor of English and Linguistics at Mohammed V University in Rabat, Morocco. Dr Belhiah has presented his research at conferences in the UK, Spain, Switzerland, Germany, Turkey, Morocco, UAE, and the US. His publications have appeared in Classroom Discourse, Journal of Pragmatics, The Modern Language Journal, Language Policy, and Applied Linguistics.
Ikbal Zeddari is an Associate Professor and Chair of the English Department at the Faculty of Letters and Humanities, Mohammed V University in Rabat, Morocco. Holding a doctorate in Applied Linguistics and TEFL, his main research interests lie in the area of second language acquisition. More particularly, he investigates lexico-semantic phenomena at the syntax-semantics interface. He is also interested in higher education pedagogy, with a focus on student experiences and teaching methodologies.
Nourddine Amrous is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Letters and Humanities, Mohammed V University in Rabat, Morocco, where he teaches courses on e.g. syntax, stylistics, composition, and spoken English. Holding a doctorate in Education (2006), his main research interests include second language acquisition, language teaching, teacher training, and theoretical linguistics.
Jamal Bahmad is an Assistant Professor of Literature and Cultural Studies at the Department of English, Mohammed V University in Rabat, Morocco. He earned his PhD from the University of Stirling (UK, 2014) with a dissertation on contemporary Moroccan urban cinema. He specialises in the field of North African cultural studies with a focus on cinema, cities, literature, memory, and youth cultures.
Nourdin Bejjit is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Letters, Mohammed V University in Rabat, Morocco, where he teaches courses on print culture, British culture and history, and world literature. He earned his PhD (2009) in colonial and postcolonial book history from the Open University, and previously received his MA (2004) in national and international literatures in English from the University of London. His research interests include book history, postcolonial literature, and travel writing.