Abstract
Background: Although students in teacher education programmes in Namibia study through
the medium of English, their academic language (AL) proficiency remains a challenge for most
of them. In the Junior Primary Education programmes, they are not only required to master AL
for their own studies, but they must also learn how to teach emergent academic AL in the
primary school.
Aim: This study aimed to address this dual challenge, a practitioner research study was
undertaken to assess and compare students’ AL proficiency skills in English cross sectionally
in 2020.
Setting: The study was conducted online with (N = 78) student teachers at one of 12 campuses
of the University of Namibia during the COVID-19 pandemic period.
Methods: A standardised test compiled by Uccelli et al. was administered to 78 randomly
selected students to measure their core AL skills.
Results: The assessment results revealed distinct gaps in students’ AL proficiency. In addition,
the findings demonstrated a statistically significant variance in assessment outcomes across
different year groups.
Conclusion: The university, despite provision of several courses, has taken note that AL should
ideally be integrated across the curriculum.
Contribution: The study revealed usable evidence about students’ AL proficiency, indicating
patterns across cohorts.