In Malaysia’s multilingual, highly competitive graduate economy, English language proficiency is discursively constructed by the media as a type of socio-economic capital, having a profound impact on employability and higher education outcomes. The research explores how national newspapers—The Star, New Straits Times, and Malay Mail—construct English language narratives within the discourses of graduate employability and labour market needs. Based on Braun and Clarke’s (2006) thematic analysis framework, a purposive sample of 13 news articles and opinion columns was analysed to follow dominant discursive patterns. Two overarching constructions were identified: (1) English as a gatekeeping mechanism to employment and global market participation; and (2) English proficiency framed as both an employability asset and a matter of personal moral responsibility. These media constructions both mirror and reinforce societal expectations, placing English at the centre of professional capital in Malaysia’s transforming knowledge-based economy. The findings highlight the media’s powerful role in shaping public discourse, informing language policy, and leading English language pedagogy and graduate preparation initiatives in higher education.
Ishak et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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