Bilingual Minorities and Languages Issues in Writing: Toward Professionwide Responses to a New Challenge
After a definition of the nature of bilingualism - elective vs circumstantial - in American bilingual minorities, it is argued that the current compartmentalization of the English-teaching profession is unfit to fulfill the needs of this population. Research in second-language writing is found to ha...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Written communication 1992-01, Vol.9 (1), p.85-136 |
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description | After a definition of the nature of bilingualism - elective vs circumstantial - in American bilingual minorities, it is argued that the current compartmentalization of the English-teaching profession is unfit to fulfill the needs of this population. Research in second-language writing is found to have focused on English as a second language students rather than on fluent /functional bilinguals. The breakdown of compartmentalization is recommended; researchers - especially bilingual ones usually working on mainstream issues - should study questions involving non-English-background populations. 1 Table, 4 Figures, 104 References. Adapted from the source document |
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identifier | ISSN: 0741-0883 |
ispartof | Written communication, 1992-01, Vol.9 (1), p.85-136 |
issn | 0741-0883 |
language | eng |
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source | SAGE Complete A-Z List |
title | Bilingual Minorities and Languages Issues in Writing: Toward Professionwide Responses to a New Challenge |
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