|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Julie Choi (University of Melbourne, Australia) , Sue Ollerhead (University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.362kg ISBN: 9781138228498ISBN 10: 1138228494 Pages: 244 Publication Date: 20 December 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1. Introduction Part I Plurilingual language-in-education policies 2. Provision, policy and reasoning: The pluralisation of the language education endeavor 3. Mother-tongue based multilingual education in the Philippines: Perceptions, problems and possibilities 4. Bypassing unrepresentative policies: What do Indigenous Australians say about language education? Part II Plurilingual student repertoires 5. The translingual advantage: Metrolingual student repertoires 6. An expanded view of translanguaging: Leveraging the dynamic interactions between a young multilingual writer and machine translation software 7. Keeping the plurilingual insight: Visualising the literacies of out-of-school children in northern Ghana Part III Plurilingual classroom practices and teacher perspectives 8. Translingual innovation within contact zones: Lessons from Australian and South African schools 9. Plurilingualism and agency in language education: The role of dramatic action-oriented tasks 10. The plurilingual life: A tale of high school students in two cities Part IV Plurilingualism in higher education contexts 11. Transforming lexicon, transforming industry: University lecturers as language planners in Timor-Leste 12. Challenging the quiet violence of a powerful language: Translanguaging towards transformative teaching in South African universities 13. From linguistic preparation to developing a translingual mindset: possible implications of plurilingualism for researcher educationReviews""[W]e can gain insights from the multifarious ways in which the authors of the articles collected in this volume have critically engaged with [the] complex issues in each of their diverse contexts. What unifies them is the commitment to a candid and critical discussion of how to serve students’ best interests amidst all these new competing policy discourses and institutional regimes."" --Angel M. Y. Lin, The University of Hong Kong ""Plurilingualism in teaching and learning’s greatest value lies in the range of voices and perspectives it presents, of different people enriching education through language diversity. [...] I highly commend this volume to you as a guide for your investigations into language diversity and how it best fits within your practice. "" --Elizabeth Gunn, Fine Print, the journal of the Victorian Adult Literacy and Basic Education Council [W]e can gain insights from the multifarious ways in which the authors of the articles collected in this volume have critically engaged with [the] complex issues in each of their diverse contexts. What unifies them is the commitment to a candid and critical discussion of how to serve students' best interests amidst all these new competing policy discourses and institutional regimes. --Angel M. Y. Lin, The University of Hong Kong Plurilingualism in teaching and learning's greatest value lies in the range of voices and perspectives it presents, of different people enriching education through language diversity. [...] I highly commend this volume to you as a guide for your investigations into language diversity and how it best fits within your practice. --Elizabeth Gunn, Fine Print, the journal of the Victorian Adult Literacy and Basic Education Council [W]e can gain insights from the multifarious ways in which the authors of the articles collected in this volume have critically engaged with [the] complex issues in each of their diverse contexts. What unifies them is the commitment to a candid and critical discussion of how to serve students' best interests amidst all these new competing policy discourses and institutional regimes. --Angel M. Y. Lin, The University of Hong Kong [W]e can gain insights from the multifarious ways in which the authors of the articles collected in this volume have critically engaged with [the] complex issues in each of their diverse contexts. What unifies them is the commitment to a candid and critical discussion of how to serve students' best interests amidst all these new competing policy discourses and institutional regimes. --Angel M. Y. Lin, The University of Hong Kong Plurilingualism in teaching and learning's greatest value lies in the range of voices and perspectives it presents, of different people enriching education through language diversity. [...] I highly commend this volume to you as a guide for your investigations into language diversity and how it best fits within your practice. --Elizabeth Gunn, Fine Print, the journal of the Victorian Adult Literacy and Basic Education Council Author InformationJulie Choi is a Lecturer in Education (Additional Languages) in the Melbourne Graduate School of Education at the University of Melbourne, Australia. Sue Ollerhead is a Lecturer in Literacies and English as an Additional Language in the School of Education at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |