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E-grāmata: Learning English at School: Identity, Socio-material Relations and Classroom Practice

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This fully revised edition provides a comprehensive discussion of how insights and concepts from new materialism and posthumanism might be used in investigating second language learning and teaching in classrooms. Alongside the sociocultural and poststructural perspectives discussed in the first edition, this new book presents insights from new materialism on identity, second language learning and pedagogical practices. This application of new theory deepens our understanding of how minority language background children learn English in the context of their classrooms. The author comprehensively explains the new materiality perspectives and suggests how research from this perspective might provide new insights on second language learning and teaching in classrooms. The book is unique in analysing empirical classroom data from a sociocultural, but also a new materiality perspective, and has the potential to change our understandings of research and pedagogical practices.

Recenzijas

In a world that needs new visions and ethics, this book stimulates important and original conversations. Theoretically grounded in new materialism Toohey rethinks classrooms as assemblages, joining the human and non-human as we take rides with pens on paper, follow fingers on iPads, and play with objects. This is a generous open-ended critical inquiry into the lives of children, complete with research stories from which we can all learn. * Angela Creese, University of Birmingham, UK * Kelleen Toohey writes of her transition from her groundbreaking sociocultural studies to an engagement with emergent socio-material perspectives. The result is an important new vision for the field: at once theoretically generative while never losing focus on the lifeworlds of students, classrooms and their communities. * Allan Luke, Emeritus Professor, Queensland University of Technology, Australia * I read this book with a deep sense of appreciation for how children engage in and with socio-material worlds. It is the kind of writing and research that comes with years of experience in the field, observing teachers and young children in respectful, ethical and attentive ways. Toohey tells stories that celebrate and venerate children as complex and persistent feelers, makers and thinkers. It is a book that belongs on our book shelves. * Jennifer Rowsell, Brock University, Canada *

Acknowledgements for the Second Edition ix
Introduction 1(7)
Learning English at School in 2000 and Now
4(1)
Chapter Summary
5(3)
1 Framing Story: Theory, Setting and Methodology
8(17)
Language, Learners and Learning in Early Second Language Acquisition Research
8(4)
The Sociocultural/Discursive Turn
12(1)
Language, learning and learners in sociocultural theory
12(5)
Communities of practice
17(1)
Second language learning from a sociocultural perspective
18(1)
Summary
19(1)
Research Questions
20(1)
The Research Site
21(1)
Methodology
22(3)
2 New Materialism and Language Learning
25(20)
Non-dualism, Relational Ontologies and Non-essentialism
26(3)
`Intra-action', `Agential Cuts', Desire and `Affect'
29(1)
Intra-action
29(3)
Agency and agential cuts
32(1)
Desire and affect
33(1)
Understanding Language
34(4)
Research from a New Materialism Perspective
38(3)
`Writing Up' Representations or Stories
41(2)
Conclusion
43(2)
3 Kindergarten Stories
45(42)
Life in Kindergarten
45(3)
The Children's Stories
48(1)
Randy
48(8)
Surjeet
56(8)
Martin
64(5)
Julie
69(6)
Harvey
75(5)
Amy
80(4)
Coda
84(3)
4 Constructing School Identities: Kindergarten
87(27)
Being a Child/Becoming a Student
88(1)
Aspects of School Identity
89(1)
Academic competence or learning potential
90(5)
Physical presentation/competence
95(3)
Behavioural competence
98(1)
Social competence
99(2)
Language proficiency
101(2)
Assigning Identities: ESLness
103(2)
Discussion
105(6)
Conclusion
111(3)
5 `Break Them Up, Take Them Away': Practices in the Grade 1 Classroom
114(23)
Sitting at Your Own Desk
117(6)
Using Your Own Things
123(3)
Using Your Own Words and Ideas
126(3)
Discussion
129(8)
6 Discursive Practices in Grade 2: Language Arts Lessons
137(29)
Language Arts Lessons
139(1)
Recitation Sequences
140(1)
Background
140(2)
Recitation sequences and the focal children
142(5)
Teacher-mandated Partner and Small Group Conversations
147(1)
Background
147(1)
Teacher-mandated peer conversations and the focal children
147(7)
Student-managed Conversations
154(1)
Background
154(1)
Student-managed conversations and the focal children
155(4)
Discussion
159(1)
Recitation sequences
159(1)
Teacher-mandated peer conversations
160(3)
Peer-managed conversations
163(1)
Conclusion
164(2)
7 Appropriating Voices and Telling Stories
166(16)
Identity, Resource Distribution and Discourse Practices
168(1)
Access to Voice
169(3)
Facilitating Access
172(2)
The Politics of Representation
174(6)
Documentation
180(1)
Future Second Language Acquisition Research
181(1)
Afterword 182(4)
References 186(14)
Author Index 200(4)
Subject Index 204
Kelleen Toohey is Professor Emerita, Faculty of Education, Simon Fraser University, Canada. Her recent research focuses on socio-material perspectives on language learning with a particular focus on early childhood language education. She is a co-author of Disrupting Boundaries in Education and Research (Cambridge University Press, 2017), Collaborative Research in Multilingual Classrooms (Multilingual Matters, 2009) and co-editor, with Bonny Norton, of Critical Pedagogies and Language Learning (Cambridge University Press, 2004).