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This volume examines the agency of second/foreign language teachers
in diverse geographical contexts and in both K-12 and adult
education. It offers new understandings and conceptualizations of
second/foreign language teacher agency through a variety of types
of empirical data. It also demonstrates the use of different
methodologies or analytic tools to study the multidimensional,
dynamic and complex nature of second/foreign language teacher
agency. The chapters draw on a range of theories and approaches to
language teacher agency (including ecological theory, positioning
theory, complexity theory and actor-network theory) that expand our
understanding of the concept, while at the same time presenting
various analytic approaches such as discourse studies and narrative
inquiry. The chapters also analyze the connection of agency to
other relevant topics, such as teacher identity, emotions,
positioning and autonomy.
Drawing on--but also extending--the theories and methods of applied
linguistics, this book demonstrates how scholars of language might
work together and with non-language specialists to address pressing
concerns and issues of our time. Chapters explore efforts to
recognize the legitimacy of stigmatized language varieties in
public and institutional domains, museum-based science education
for linguistically diverse children, how corpus analysis might
illuminate the tension between the language choices and commitments
of certain leaders, the embodied and artistic forms of
meaning-making that challenge norms of Whiteness, and the
transformative power of translanguaging in community-based theater.
In addition, the volume demonstrates ways to enhance equity in
healthcare delivery for immigrant families, examines the
experiences of cultural health navigators working with
refugee-background families, and highlights the value of raising
public awareness of language issues related to social justice.
These accounts show that applied linguists stand ready to interface
with other scholars, other institutions, and the public to make
socially-engaged and impactful contributions to the study of
language, society, education, and access. Collectively, the authors
respond to an important gap in the field and take a significant
step towards a more socially-just, accessible, and inclusive
approach to applied linguistics.
This book is the first to explore the constitution of language
learner agency by drawing on performativity theory, an approach
that remains on the periphery of second language research. Though
many scholars have drawn on poststructuralism to theorize learner
identity in non-essentialist terms, most have treated agency as an
essential feature that belongs to or inheres in individuals. By
contrast, this work promotes a view of learner agency as inherently
social and as performatively constituted in discursive practice. In
developing a performativity approach to learner agency, it builds
on the work of Vygotsky and Bakhtin along with research on 'agency
of spaces' and language ideologies. Through the study of discourses
produced in interviews, this work explores how immigrant small
business owners co-construct their theories of agency, in relation
to language learning and use. The analysis focuses on three
discursive constructs produced in the interview
talk-subject-predicate constructs, evaluative stance, and reported
speech-and investigates their discursive effects in mobilizing
ideologically normative, performatively realized agentive selves.
This book showcases how language learner agency can be understood
and researched from varying perspectives by providing, for the
first time, a collection of diverse approaches in one volume. The
volume is organised into three main sections:the first sections
offers an introduction to varying theoretical approaches to agency;
the second section presents analyses of agency in a variety of
empirical studies; and the third section focuses on the pedagogical
implications of data-based studies of agency. The volume includes
the work of researchers working in languages including English (ESL
and EFL), Greek, Spanish, Swedish, Italian, Hindi, Marathi,
Gujarati and Truku (an indigenous language in Taiwan) and with both
child and adult language learners. This collection will serve as a
key reference for researchers of language learning and teaching,
sociolinguistics and language and identity.
This volume examines the agency of second/foreign language teachers
in diverse geographical contexts and in both K-12 and adult
education. It offers new understandings and conceptualizations of
second/foreign language teacher agency through a variety of types
of empirical data. It also demonstrates the use of different
methodologies or analytic tools to study the multidimensional,
dynamic and complex nature of second/foreign language teacher
agency. The chapters draw on a range of theories and approaches to
language teacher agency (including ecological theory, positioning
theory, complexity theory and actor-network theory) that expand our
understanding of the concept, while at the same time presenting
various analytic approaches such as discourse studies and narrative
inquiry. The chapters also analyze the connection of agency to
other relevant topics, such as teacher identity, emotions,
positioning and autonomy.
This book offers an important look at the American Revolution
through British newspaper abstracts covering the last few years of
the war. The abstracts, from January 1780 through September 1782,
vary in content and include such things as extracts from let
Drawing on--but also extending--the theories and methods of applied
linguistics, this book demonstrates how scholars of language might
work together and with non-language specialists to address pressing
concerns and issues of our time. Chapters explore efforts to
recognize the legitimacy of stigmatized language varieties in
public and institutional domains, museum-based science education
for linguistically diverse children, how corpus analysis might
illuminate the tension between the language choices and commitments
of certain leaders, the embodied and artistic forms of
meaning-making that challenge norms of Whiteness, and the
transformative power of translanguaging in community-based theater.
In addition, the volume demonstrates ways to enhance equity in
healthcare delivery for immigrant families, examines the
experiences of cultural health navigators working with
refugee-background families, and highlights the value of raising
public awareness of language issues related to social justice.
These accounts show that applied linguists stand ready to interface
with other scholars, other institutions, and the public to make
socially-engaged and impactful contributions to the study of
language, society, education, and access. Collectively, the authors
respond to an important gap in the field and take a significant
step towards a more socially-just, accessible, and inclusive
approach to applied linguistics.
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