The Myth of Linguistic Homogeneity in U.S. College Composition

The author suggests that English-only classrooms are not only the implicit goal of much language policy in the United States, but also assumed to be already the case, an ironic situation in light of composition's historical role as "containing" language differences in U.S. higher educ...

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Veröffentlicht in:College English 2006-07, Vol.68 (6), p.637-651
1. Verfasser: Matsuda, Paul Kei
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The author suggests that English-only classrooms are not only the implicit goal of much language policy in the United States, but also assumed to be already the case, an ironic situation in light of composition's historical role as "containing" language differences in U.S. higher education. He suggests that the myth of linguistic homogeneity has serious implications not only for international second-language writers in U.S. classrooms but also for resident second-language writers and for native speakers of unprivileged varieties of English, and that rather than simply abandon the placement practices that have worked to contain--but also to support--multilingual writers, composition teachers need to reimagine the composition classroom as the multilingual space that it is, where the presence of language differences is the default. (Contains 1 note.)
ISSN:0010-0994
2161-8178
DOI:10.2307/25472180