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Communication and Language: Surmounting Barriers to Cross-Cultural Understanding [Hardback]

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Communication and Language play a foundational role in the overall pursuit of equity and social justice in education. This volume does not take up the majority and dominant views which are especially visible in developments in the field of linguistic education and English language instruction. Rather, it travels the path less followed, to attend to the language and communication concerns of populations that possess little political and economic power and whose academic and social needs are often neglected. The volume attends to the role of language acquisition in 'levelling the playing field' to enable ALL students to develop into contented family members, good neighbours, and productive citizens in an increasingly diverse and global society.

The issue takes on far greater importance, as it gradually comes to light that the capacity for language corresponds to and even implements the ability to interrelate with others. Far from being a mere utilitarian tool this is now appreciated as constituting the realm of abilities to take the position of the other, to share a field of meaning, and to project and pursue truly humane and indeed inter-humane attitudes and goals. In this light communication and language, whether verbal or preverbal, constitute the field in which one first attains and progressively evolves one’s humanity.

In this volume, scholars from ten different countries examine issues related to the influence of language and communication patterns on equity and social justice in the lives of disadvantaged and marginalized populations around the globe (i.e., educational opportunities, community stability, economic prospects, and political power). Critical issues addressed include: education in traditional, national, or Western languages; language integration through dialects and code switching; non-verbal academic engagement through art, signing, and photography; cross-cultural engagement through language equity in higher education; and the influence of Western language acquisition on the self-concepts of disadvantaged students. As the succession of sections in this volume makes clear, success in the realization of language and communication abilities is not simple. Rather it reflects human life and interaction in all its complexity.



This volume highlights the essential role of communication and language in promoting equity and social justice in education, focusing on marginalized groups. It examines how language impacts educational opportunities, community stability, and economic prospects.

Foreword ix
Lourdes Diaz Soto
Series Introduction: Communication and Language xiii
Elinor L. Brown
Rhonda Craven
George McLean
Volume Introduction xv
Elinor L. Brown
George McLean
PART I DOMINANT OR TRADITIONAL: WHICH LANGUAGE USE?
1 Local Language of Instruction for Quality Learning and Social Equity in Tanzania
3(22)
Zehlia Babaci-Wilhite
2 Linguistic and Social Equity for Yughur and Kyrgyz National Minorities in Northwest China: Disadvantages of Either-Or Choice Between Dominant-Language Submersion and Mother Tongue Education
25(30)
Stephen A. Bahry
Rakhat Zholdoshalieva
3 Private Language Management in Singapore: Which Language to Practice and How
55(24)
Xiao Lan Curdt-Christiansen
4 The Voice of the African Traditional Healer: Implications for Cross Cultural Educational Practices
79(24)
Lynne Radomsky
Lisa Lopez Levers
PART II LANGUAGE INTEGRATION FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE EMPOWERMENT
5 Language, Culture, and Communication: A Review of the Challenges Facing NESB Migrants in New Zealand
103(22)
Mingsheng Li
6 Chinglish: An Interlanguage with Inherent Communicative Challenges for Chinese English Language Learners
125(16)
Pierre Orelus
Wenjie Wang
7 Social Justice Education in the Language Classroom and Beyond
141(24)
Nicole Benson
PART III PROMOTING ENGAGEMENT THROUGH NON-VERBAL COMMUNICATION
8 Creating Language in a Vacuum: Deaf Children as Creative Communicators
165(22)
Barbara Gerner de Garcia
9 Auto-Photography and Captioning: Nonverbal Communication Tools
187(24)
Elinor L. Brown
10 Art as Language, Pedagogy, and Method: Promoting Learning Engagement for Young African Refugee Migrant Students in Urban Australia
211(22)
Felicity McArdle
Jennifer Pei-Ling Tan
11 Modes of Representation as Meanings for Second-Language Learners in Hong Kong
233(26)
Tat Heung Choi
12 Immigrant Students: Barriers and Facilitators to Understanding in a New Socio-Linguistic Setting
259(20)
Karen Nicholas
Jo Fletcher
Faye Parkhill
PART IV CROSS-CULTURAL COMMUNICATION: REMOVING BARRIERS TO EDUCATIONAL EQUITY?
13 Teaching ELLs in the USA: Toward a Pedagogy of Social Justice and Empowerment
279(24)
Davi S. Reis
Lisa Lopez Levers
14 Epistemic Justice and the Communication of Non-Western Theoretical Tools: Advancing the Internationalization of Research Education
303(22)
Michael Singh
Guihua Cui
15 The Pragmatics of Non-Compliance by Tertiary Cantonese Learners of English in Writing Tutorials
325(26)
Cynthia Lee
PART V COMMUNICATION PROFICIENCY AND THE SELF
16 Self-Concepts of English-speaking and Non-English-Speaking Students in an English-Speaking Country
351(22)
Alexander Seeshing Yeung
17 A Dual Disadvantage? Examining the Academic Self-Concept of Students with Learning Difficulties
373(20)
Danielle Tracey
About the Authors 393
Alexander S. Yeung, University of Western Sydney, Australia

Elinor L. Brown, University of Kentucky, USA

Cynthia Lee, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong