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The purpose of Transforming Schooling for Second Language Learners:
Theoretical Insights, Policies, Pedagogies, and Practices is to
bring together educational researchers and practitioners who have
implemented, documented, or examined policies, pedagogies, and
practices in and out of classrooms and in real and virtual contexts
that are in some way transforming what we know about the extent to
which emergent bilinguals (EBs) learn and achieve in educational
settings. In the following chapters, scholars and researchers
identify both (1) the current state of schooling for EBs, from
their perspective, and (2) the particular ways that policies,
pedagogies, and/or practices transform schooling as it currently
exists for EBs in discernible ways based on their scholarship and
research. Drawing on current and seminal research in fields
including second language acquisition, applied linguistics,
sociolinguistics, and educational linguistics, contributing authors
draw on complementary theoretical, methodological, and
philosophical frameworks that attend to the social, cultural,
political, and ideological dimensions of being and becoming
bi/multilingual and bi/multiliterate in schools and in the United
States. In sum, we are deeply committed to asserting hope,
possibility, and potential to discussions and discourses about
bi/multilingual students. We value the urgency around improving the
conditions, experiences, and circumstances in which they are
learning languages and academic content. Our aim is to highlight
perspectives, conceptualizations, orientations, and ideologies that
disrupt and contest legacies of deficit thinking, linguistic
purism, language standardization, and racism and the racialization
of ethnolinguistic minorities.
The purpose of Transforming Schooling for Second Language Learners:
Theoretical Insights, Policies, Pedagogies, and Practices is to
bring together educational researchers and practitioners who have
implemented, documented, or examined policies, pedagogies, and
practices in and out of classrooms and in real and virtual contexts
that are in some way transforming what we know about the extent to
which emergent bilinguals (EBs) learn and achieve in educational
settings. In the following chapters, scholars and researchers
identify both (1) the current state of schooling for EBs, from
their perspective, and (2) the particular ways that policies,
pedagogies, and/or practices transform schooling as it currently
exists for EBs in discernible ways based on their scholarship and
research. Drawing on current and seminal research in fields
including second language acquisition, applied linguistics,
sociolinguistics, and educational linguistics, contributing authors
draw on complementary theoretical, methodological, and
philosophical frameworks that attend to the social, cultural,
political, and ideological dimensions of being and becoming
bi/multilingual and bi/multiliterate in schools and in the United
States. In sum, we are deeply committed to asserting hope,
possibility, and potential to discussions and discourses about
bi/multilingual students. We value the urgency around improving the
conditions, experiences, and circumstances in which they are
learning languages and academic content. Our aim is to highlight
perspectives, conceptualizations, orientations, and ideologies that
disrupt and contest legacies of deficit thinking, linguistic
purism, language standardization, and racism and the racialization
of ethnolinguistic minorities.
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