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Liberating Language Education [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 360 pages, height x width x depth: 234x156x23 mm, weight: 682 g
  • Sērija : New Perspectives on Language and Education
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Multilingual Matters
  • ISBN-10: 178892794X
  • ISBN-13: 9781788927949
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 178,19 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 360 pages, height x width x depth: 234x156x23 mm, weight: 682 g
  • Sērija : New Perspectives on Language and Education
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Multilingual Matters
  • ISBN-10: 178892794X
  • ISBN-13: 9781788927949

This book engages with new ways of understanding language that include other resources and practices and bring to the fore its messiness, unpredictability and interconnectedness. The chapters illustrate how a translingual and transcultural orientation to language can provide a point of entry to reimagining language education in the 21st century.



This book responds to a growing body of work in sociolinguistics and applied linguistics that places an emphasis on situated descriptions of language education practices and illuminates how these descriptions are enmeshed with local, institutional and wider social forces. It engages with new ways of understanding language that expand its meaning by including other semiotic resources and meaning-making practices and bring to the fore its messiness and unpredictability. The chapters illustrate how a translingual and transcultural orientation to language and language pedagogy can provide a point of entry to reimagining what language education might look like under conditions of heightened linguistic and cultural diversity and increased linguistic and social inequalities. The book unites an international group of contributors, presenting state-of-the-art empirical studies drawing on a wide range of local contexts and spaces, from linguistically and culturally heterogeneous mainstream and HE classrooms to complementary (community) school and informal language learning contexts.

Recenzijas

The editors and contributors to this book liberate language and language education by placing them in a 'caravan' of unpredictable actions that are locally situated. This book masterfully centers the aesthetic ways in which people and learners liberate language by bringing art, digital storytelling, drama improvisation, poetry, song, and music into the center of meaning-making. * Ofelia Garcķa, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, USA * This is a truly path-breaking volume. It provides a highly original, transdisciplinary vision of how language and language education can be reimagined in research and practice. Drawing on recent advances in theory-building relating to language in contemporary social life, the contributors present rich and engaging accounts of fluid, situated language learning practices and demonstrate, in clear and compelling ways, how language education can be liberated locally from long-dominant ideologies about fixity in language and prescriptive models of pedagogy. * Marilyn Martin-Jones, University of Birmingham, UK * The stimulating title of this remarkable book reflects the original theoretical questionings of the conceptualisation of language education across multiple new facets of language learning experiences. Readers will discover an exiting alternative vision of language education through a wide range of new research dimensions explored to transform language learning and teaching. This volume is a seminal text that will stimulate researchers, teachers and learners alike to understand that our responsibilities regarding language education have changed and that we must all become engaged policy activists. -- Christine Hélot, University Strasbourg, France At the core of Liberating Language Education is an invitation to readers to problematize how they perceive language education. The diverse contributions that make up this volume engage with this question from multiple perspectives, and effectively challenge views of communication that are narrowly linguistic and views of learning that are narrowly formal. The effectiveness of the volume lies in the suggestive power of the various contributions, and in the opportunities these diverse chapters create for imagining alternative to normative practice in language education. -- Achilleas Kostoulas, University of Thessaly, Greece * LINGUIST List 33.2271 * This book certainly reaches its liberating goals by presenting multiple ways of challenging static notions and thoroughly illustrates Tudors statement that language teaching is far more complex than producing cars. -- Tazin Abdullah, Macquarie University, Australia * Multilingua, 2022 *

Papildus informācija

Takes a radical approach to language education that is both situated and decentred
Contributors ix
Introduction: Why Liberating Language Education? 1(22)
Vally Lytra
Cristina Ros i Sole
Jim Anderson
Vicky Macleroy
Part 1 Policies, Discourses and Ideologies
1 `I Don't Think We Encourage the Use of their Home Language': Exploring `Multilingualism Light' in a London Primary School
23(17)
Thomas Quehl
2 Recognising the Creole Community: Discursive Constructions of Enslavement and the Enslaved in Kreol Textbooks in Mauritius
40(15)
Ambarin Mooznah Auleear Owodally
3 Appropriating Portuguese Language Policies in England
55(17)
Catia Verguete
4 Making Sense of the Internal Diversities of Greek Schools Abroad: Exploring the Purposeful Use of Translation as Communicative Resource for Language Learning and Identity Construction
72(27)
Vally Lytra
Commentary for Part 1
91(8)
Ana Souza
Part 2 Language-Living: Materialities, Affectivities and Becomings
5 Languaging in Language Cafes: Emotion Work, Creating Alternative Worlds and Metalanguaging
99(19)
Nuria Polo-Perez
Prue Holmes
6 Language Studies as Transcultural Becoming and Participation: Undoing Language Boundaries across the Danube Region
118(25)
Eszter Tarsoly
Jelena Calic
7 The Textures of Language: An Autoethnography of a Gloves Collection
143(24)
Cristina Ros i Sole
Commentary for Part 2
159(8)
Simon Coffey
Part 3 Transcultural Journeying and Aesthetics
8 Visual Art in Arabic Foreign and Heritage Language-and-Culture Learning: Expanding the Scope for Meaning-Making
167(19)
Jim Anderson
9 Creating Pedagogical Spaces for Translingual and Transcultural Meaning-Making and Student Agency in a London Greek Complementary School
186(19)
Maria Charalambous
10 Opening Spaces of Learning: A Sociomaterial Investigation of Object-Based Approaches with Migrant Youth in and beyond the Heritage Language Classroom
205(21)
Koula Charitonos
11 Translanguaging Art: Exploring the Transformative Potential of Contemporary Art for Language Teaching in the Multilingual Context
226(29)
Dobrocbna Futro
Commentary for Part 3 Liberating Language Learning through Art: The Imperative of Cultural Justice
248(7)
Alison Phipps
Part 4 Voices, Identities and Citizenship
12 How Weird is Weird? Young People, Activist Citizenship and Multivoiced Digital Stories
255(22)
Yu-chiao Chung
Vicky Macleroy
13 `Animating Objects': Co-Creation in Digital Story Making between Planning and Play
277(20)
Gabriele Budach
Gohar Sharoyan
Daniela Loghin
14 Visual Representations of Multilingualism: Exploring Aesthetic Approaches to Communication in a Fine Art Context
297(24)
Jessica Bradley
Zhu Hua
Louise Atkinson
Commentary for Part 4
318(3)
Kate Pabl
Conclusion: Language Education Collages 321(10)
Vally Lytra
Cristina Ros i Sole
Jim Anderson
Vicky Macleroy
Index 331
Vally Lytra is Reader in Languages in Education and Head of the MPhil/PhD Programme in Education at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. Her research interests include multilingualism, community and minority languages education and inclusive language pedagogies.





Cristina Ros i Solé is Lecturer in Language, Culture and Learning at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. Her current research focus is situated at the interface between language, identity and material culture where she investigates the relationship between multilingual speakers ordinary collections and their identities.





Jim Anderson is Visiting Research Fellow in the Department of Educational Studies at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. His work focuses on theories and methods of second language learning and bilingualism, multilingualism and new literacies, and language policy.





Vicky Macleroy is Reader in Education and Head of the Centre for Language, Culture and Learning at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. Her research interests focus on language development and multilingualism, multiliteracies and digital storytelling, and transformative pedagogy.