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OverviewPhilippine Languages and Education Reform: Papers in honor of Ricardo Ma. Duran Nolasco is a comprehensive, twopart scholarly volume celebrating the intellectual legacy of Dr. Ricardo Ma. Duran Nolasco-renowned linguist, educator, and leading advocate for Mother TongueBased Multilingual Education (MTBMLE) in the Philippines. Edited by Mercedes E. Arzadon, Antonio D. Igcalinos, and Thomas E. Payne, the book brings together 27 chapters, all written by professional linguists, educators, researchers, and policy practitioners whose work intersects with Philippine languages or multilingual education. The contributors represent a distinguished roster of scholars and educators, many of whom have conducted extensive fieldwork or played key roles in national education reform. The volume is organized into two major sections, each reflecting a core dimension of Dr. Nolasco's scholarly contributions: Section I: Communitybased Linguistic Descriptions of Individual Philippine Languages. This section contains 18 chapters devoted to detailed, datadriven descriptions of minoritized and understudied Philippine languages. Topics include phonology, morphosyntax, verbal morphology, case marking, serial verb constructions, historical linguistics, and grammatical change. The languages examined span the archipelago-including Kabulowan, Bisaja, Tagalog, Tboli, Teduray, Itneg Inlaud, Kapampangan, Bantayanon, Umiray Dumaget, Porohanon, Waray, Masbatenyo, Kagayanen, SamaBajaw, Buhidic Mangyan, and others. These chapters embody Dr. Nolasco's commitment to communication-based linguistics, rigorous fieldwork, and analyses grounded in the conceptual categories of the speech communities themselves. They demonstrate the extraordinary diversity of Philippine languages and reflect a careful effort to document languages that are endangered or previously underdescribed. Section II: Studies of Multilingual Education (MLE) Policy and Practice in the Philippines, comprises 9 chapters devoted to MTBMLE, language policy, literacy, orthography development, and the sociopolitical dynamics of educational reform. These contributions explore: the historical and political foundations of MTBMLE the implementation experiences of teachers and schools community advocacy for equitable and inclusive education the relationship between literacy, multimodal learning, and mothertongue instruction how MTBMLE contributes to national identity formation This volume will be of particular interest to linguists, educators, policymakers, and literacy specialists concerned with MTBMLE, language rights, and pedagogical innovation. The volume underscores the belief-central to Dr. Nolasco's life work-that linguistic diversity is a cultural treasure and that mothertongue education is essential for equity, cognitive development, and national identity. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Thomas E. Payne , Mercedes E. Arzadon , Antonio D. Igcalinos , Mercedes E. ArzadonPublisher: BookBaby Imprint: BookBaby ISBN: 9789719452751ISBN 10: 9719452757 Pages: 728 Publication Date: 02 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsAs readers explore these pages, they will find not only valuable insights into Philippine languages and education but also a testament to how scholarly expertise, when paired with passionate advocacy, can transform a nation's approach to teaching and learning. This is the legacy of Dr. Ricardo Ma. Duran Nolasco, the honoree of this volume. This legacy continues to shape how future generations of Filipinos will learn, think, and grow in their mother tongues. -- Restituto H. ""Resty"" Ceña Author InformationThomas E. Payne is a linguist and senior consultant with SIL International, as well as a research associate at the University of Oregon. He is known for his work on descriptive grammar and typology, including studies of Philippine languages such as Cebuano, Waray and Kagayanen. Maria Mercedes ""Ched"" Arzadon is a professor at the University of the Philippines Diliman College of Education, and has published on Alternative Learning Systems, Multilingual Education, Indigenous Education and Parental Involvement. She a co-founder of 170+ Talaytayan MLE. Antonio D. Igcalinos is an education specialist and leading advocate for mother-tongue based multilingual education (MTB-MLE). He has contributed extensively to research on language-in-education policy and inclusive learning. Dr. Igcalinos is the founder and current president of 170+ Talaytayan MLE Inc., an NGO dedicated to promoting multilingual education and preserving Philippine languages, through partnerships with academic institutions and government agencies, he advances culturally responsive education programs nationwide. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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