Description
This book follows four emergent bilingual students in an English-medium pre-kindergarten in the US as they navigate the social and linguistic demands of school. It illustrates how students' differing classroom social positions shaped their participation in interaction and, in turn, their English language learning across a school year. With a unique focus on both processes and outcomes, the book highlights language strategies that are overlooked if the focus is solely on one language or on group participation, and it emphasizes the importance of assessment choice in shaping which learners appear to be successful. It is a powerful argument for recognising the translingual and multimodal abilities of learners, even in education which is officially English-medium and monolingual.
Unique focus on both teaching processes and outcomes and suggests that different approaches work for different learners
About the Author
Katie A. Bernstein is Assistant Professor of Early Childhood and English Language Learner Education, Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, Arizona State University, USA. Her research focuses on the language and literacy learning of multilingual children and the contexts in which their learning takes place.
Reviews
Through close and textured observation, this book takes us into children's worlds where language learning is closely linked to social relations. Its frank engagement with theoretical and analytical dilemmas is fresh and fascinating, and points to new areas of study. The book has a rich, intensive ethnographical approach, and offers a beautifully rendered portrait of processes children encounter in their classroom every day.
* Asta Cekaite, Linkoeping University, Sweden *Absolutely fantastic! Everything about this book is compelling - the lucidly formulated case for a social view of language learning, the unfolding account of this perspective in Bernstein's original research in a multilingual pre-K classroom, and, most of all, the stories of the four four-year-old refugees, Padma, Hande, Rashmi, and Kritika, and their distinct journeys into the English language. This book is a must-read for anyone who cares about language education.
* Betsy Rymes, University of Pennsylvania, USA *Bernstein's book provides a richly descriptive account of the profoundly social process of classroom language learning by young learners [...] it offers an inspired model of ethnographic research which will be of interest to researchers and teachers alike, and to parents who wish to understand the learning journeys of their children as emergent bilinguals.
-- Mayyer Ling, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand * Language Teaching for Young Learners 3:2 *Book Information
ISBN 9781788928984
Author Katie A. Bernstein
Format Paperback
Page Count 200
Imprint Multilingual Matters
Publisher Multilingual Matters
Weight(grams) 320g
Dimensions(mm) 234mm * 156mm * 11mm