Bilingualism and Bilingual Education: Politics, Policies and Practices in a Globalized Society

von: B. Gloria Guzmán Johannessen

Springer-Verlag, 2019

ISBN: 9783030054960 , 290 Seiten

Format: PDF, Online Lesen

Kopierschutz: Wasserzeichen

Mac OSX,Windows PC für alle DRM-fähigen eReader Apple iPad, Android Tablet PC's Online-Lesen für: Mac OSX,Linux,Windows PC

Preis: 139,09 EUR

eBook anfordern eBook anfordern

Mehr zum Inhalt

Bilingualism and Bilingual Education: Politics, Policies and Practices in a Globalized Society


 

This volume presents a multinational perspective on the juxtaposition of language and politics. Bringing together an international group of authors, it offers theoretical and historical constructs on bilingualism and bilingual education. It highlights the sociocultural complexities of bilingualism in societies where indigenous and other languages coexist with colonial dominant and other prestigious immigrant languages. It underlines the linguistic diaspora and expansion of English as the world's lingua franca and their impact on indigenous and other minority languages. Finally, it features models of language teaching and teacher education.
This book challenges the existent global conditions of non-dominant languages and furthers the discourse on language politics and policies. It does so by pointing out the need to change the bilingual/multilingual educational paradigm across nations and all levels of educational systems.


Dr. B. Gloria Guzman Johannessen is Professor Emeritus from California State University Pomona and retired professor from Texas State University. Her academic background and professional work are on applied linguistics and sociolinguistics. The span of her professional career includes teaching and research in literacy, intercultural bilingual education, program administration, testing, evaluation, social justice, and faculty mentoring. Her academic and research focus was influenced by her work with language minority students in USA and Latin America, and especially with Indigenous and Creole-English populations. These experiences added relevance to her teaching and research by furthering her vision that critical language, critical pedagogy, and critical literacy are the foundation for equitable education and social justice.