In recent decades, the linguistic and cultural diversity of
school populations in the United States and other industrialized
countries has rapidly increased along with globalization processes.
At the same time, schooling as it is currently constituted
continues to be ineffective for large numbers of students.
Exploring crucial issues that emerge at the intersection of
linguistic diversity and education, this volume:
- provides an up-to-date review of sociolinguistic research and
practice aimed at improving education for students who speak
vernacular varieties of US English, English-based Creole languages,
and non-English languages
- explores the impact of dialect differences and community
languages on ethnolinguistically diverse students academic
achievement
- challenges the dominant monolingual Standard language
ideology
- presents sociolinguistically based approaches to language and
literacy education that acknowledge and build on the linguistic and
cultural resources students bring into the school.
Throughout, the authors argue for the application of
research-based knowledge to the dire situation (as measured by
school failure and drop-out rates) of many ethnolinguistic
populations in US schools. The overall aim of the volume is to
heighten acknowledgement and recognition of the linguistic and
cultural resources students bring into the schools and to explore
ways in which these resources can be used to extend the
sociolinguistic repertoires, including academic English, of all
students.
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