Pedagogizing Translingual Practice: Prospects and Possibilities
The notion of translingual practice has gained much currency within college composition and sociolinguistics over the last few years. Translingual practices challenge structuralist conceptualizations of language as discrete, bounded, impermeable, autonomous systems, conceptualizations that unfortuna...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Research in the teaching of English 2017-05, Vol.51 (4), p.464-472 |
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creator | De Costa, Peter I. Singh, Jyotsna G. Milu, Esther Wang, Xiqiao Fraiberg, Steven Canagarajah, Suresh |
description | The notion of translingual practice has gained much currency within college composition and sociolinguistics over the last few years. Translingual practices challenge structuralist conceptualizations of language as discrete, bounded, impermeable, autonomous systems, conceptualizations that unfortunately (1) privilege linguistic codes over nonlinguistic ones, and (2) contribute to the hierarchization and separation of languages, leading some languages and their corresponding users to be valued more than others. To counter such a stance, we advocate the use of translingual pedagogy, which values the fluid communicative practices of learners who mobilize multiple semiotic resources to facilitate communication. By sharing examples from our own classrooms, we also underscore the need for teachers to recognize and expand the communicative repertoires of their students. This pedagogical shift, as we illustrate, is accompanied by an instructional commitment to develop students' metalinguistic awareness and cultural sensitivities in order to create inclusive and equitable learning environments. |
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Translingual practices challenge structuralist conceptualizations of language as discrete, bounded, impermeable, autonomous systems, conceptualizations that unfortunately (1) privilege linguistic codes over nonlinguistic ones, and (2) contribute to the hierarchization and separation of languages, leading some languages and their corresponding users to be valued more than others. To counter such a stance, we advocate the use of translingual pedagogy, which values the fluid communicative practices of learners who mobilize multiple semiotic resources to facilitate communication. By sharing examples from our own classrooms, we also underscore the need for teachers to recognize and expand the communicative repertoires of their students. This pedagogical shift, as we illustrate, is accompanied by an instructional commitment to develop students' metalinguistic awareness and cultural sensitivities in order to create inclusive and equitable learning environments.</abstract><cop>Urbana</cop><pub>National Council of Teachers of English</pub><tpages>9</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Classroom communication Classrooms Communication Cross Cultural Studies Cultural Awareness Culture Educational Facilities Improvement Educational Resources Ethnicity Forum Language Language Teachers Language Usage Learning Learning environment Linguistic Theory Linguistics Metalinguistic awareness Metalinguistics Multilingual Materials Multilingualism Official Languages Pedagogy Personality Traits Racial Identification Semiotics Semitic Languages Sociolinguistics Structuralism Students Teachers Teaching Teaching Methods Transnationalism White Students Writing Writing instruction |
title | Pedagogizing Translingual Practice: Prospects and Possibilities |
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