Description
Introduces the concept of language socialization by providing case studies from various classrooms around the world.
About the Author
Matthew J. Burdelski is Professor of Applied Japanese Linguistics at Osaka University, Japan. Focusing on Japanese and US classrooms and communities, his research utilizes language socialization and conversation analysis to investigate adult-child and children's multimodal interactions in teaching, learning, acquiring, and using Japanese as a first, second, and heritage language. Kathryn M. Howard is Associate Dean and Director of Clinical Experiences and Partnerships at California State University, Channel Islands. Her work focuses on how multilingual children develop a range of linguistic resources from multiple languages in formal (classrooms) and informal educational contexts to display or enact social identities and to engage in complex social relationships.
Reviews
'This remarkable volume offers in-depth accounts of socialization to and through language. It is a rich and valuable addition to other studies of language use in classrooms and helps us understand socialization through the often taken-for-granted aspects of everyday interactional routines.' Vibeke Grover, University of Oslo
'Scholars and practitioners of education and learning will find Language Socialization in Classrooms: Culture, Interaction, and Language Development to be an invaluable book ... This volume is a well-balanced collection of essays by both young and established scholars who have been actively promoting research on language socialisation in the classroom ... readers will definitely enrich their views on the characteristics of sociality in classrooms.' Akira Takada, Contrastive Pragmatics
Book Information
ISBN 9781107187832
Author Matthew J. Burdelski
Format Hardback
Page Count 288
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 570g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 158mm * 18mm