Bültmann & Gerriets
Bilingualism for All?
Raciolinguistic Perspectives on Dual Language Education in the United States
von Nelson Flores, Amelia Tseng, Nicholas Subtirelu
Verlag: Channel View Publications
Reihe: Bilingual Education & Bilingualism Nr. 125
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Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


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ISBN: 978-1-80041-006-0
Erschienen am 16.12.2020
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 234 mm [H] x 156 mm [B]
Umfang: 296 Seiten

Preis: 50,99 €

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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Nelson Flores is Associate Professor of Educational Linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education, USA. His current projects seek to apply a raciolinguistic perspective to bilingual education in the United States.


Amelia Tseng is Assistant Professor of Linguistics and Spanish in World Languages and Cultures at American University, USA and holds a Research Associate appointment at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage. Her research centers on multilingual repertoires, race and ethnicity, and identity construction in immigrant and diasporic communities.


Nicholas Subtirelu is Assistant Professor of Applied Linguistics at Georgetown University, USA. His recent research looks at how bilingualism is constructed as a commodity and the implications this has for racial economic justice in language education.



Introduction. Nelson Flores, Amelia Tseng and Nicholas Subtirelu: Bilingualism for All or Just for the Rich and White?


Chapter 1. M. Garrett Delavan, Juan A. Freire and Verónica E. Valdez: The Intersectionality of Neoliberal Classing with Raciolinguistic Marginalization in State Dual Language Policy: A Call for Locally Crafted Programs


Chapter 2. Crissa Stephens: Common Threads: Language Policy, Nation, Whiteness, and Privilege in Iowa's First Dual Language Program


Chapter 3. María Cioè-Peña: Dual Language and the Erasure of Emergent Bilinguals Labeled as Disabled (EBLADs)


Chapter 4. Lisa M. Dorner, Jeong-Mi Moon, Edwin Nii Bonney and Alexandria Otis: Dueling Discourses in Dual Language Education: Multilingual "Success for All" versus the Academic "Decline" of Black Students


Chapter 5. Sera J. Hernandez: Centering Raciolinguistic Ideologies in Two-Way Dual Language Education: The Politicized Role of Parents in Mediating their Children's Bilingualism


Chapter 6. Jazmín A. Muro: Helping or Being Helped? The Influence of Raciolinguistic Ideologies on Parental Involvement in Dual Immersion


Chapter 7. Sharon Avni and Kate Menken: Hebrew Dual Language Bilingual Education: The Intersection of Race, Language, and Religion


Chapter 8. Jin Sook Lee, Wona Lee and Hala Sun: Raciolinguistic Positioning of Language Models in a Korean-English Dual Language Immersion Classroom


Chapter 9. Claudia G. Cervantes-Soon, Enrique David Degollado and Idalia Nuñez: The Black and Brown Search for Agency: African American and Latinx Children's Plight to Bilingualism in a Two-Way Dual Language Program


Chapter 10. Margarita Gómez and Kristina Collins: Who Gets to Count as Emerging Bilingual? Adopting a Holistic Writing Rubric for All


Chapter 11. Suzanne García-Mateus, Kimberly A. Strong, Deborah K. Palmer and Dan Heiman: One White Student's Journey through Six Years of Elementary Schooling: Uncovering Whiteness and Privilege in Two-Way Bilingual Education


Conclusion. Nelson Flores, Nicholas Subtirelu and Amelia Tseng: Bilingualism for All? Revisiting the Question


Afterword. Guadalupe Valdés: What is the Magic Sauce?


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