After Castañeda: a glotopolítica perspective and educational dignity paradigm to educate racialized bilinguals
Autor: | Ofelia García, Luis E. Poza, Oscar Jimenez-Castellanos |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Linguistics and Language
Sociology and Political Science biology Bilingual education Education theory media_common.quotation_subject Garcia Gender studies biology.organism_classification Language and Linguistics Dignity Language education Multilingualism Racialization Sociology Sociolinguistics media_common |
Zdroj: | Language Policy. 21:451-474 |
ISSN: | 1573-1863 1568-4555 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10993-021-09606-z |
Popis: | In the U.S., programming for students classified as English Learners must adhere to the framework outlined in Castaneda v. Pickard (1981), which demands a basis in “legitimate educational theory,” implementation with “adequate techniques,” and regular evaluation (p. 1010), while remaining explicitly agnostic about which theoretical orientations should guide “language remediation” (p. 1009). Unsurprisingly, such minimal thresholds and deficit orientations still countenance assimilationist ideologies and practices that devalue students’ bi/multilingualism (Garcia and Sung in Bilingu Res J 41(4):318–333, 2018). Even in bilingual programming, colonialist approaches reinforce norms of language standardization that perpetuate linguistic racialization and marginalization (Grinberg and Saavedra in Rev Educ Res 70(4):419–441, 2000). Thus, Castaneda exemplifies the limitations of political victories subject to multitudinous interpretations and enactments. In this theoretical article, we harken to the calls for justice for minoritized communities that included demands for bilingual education during the civil rights movement (Flores and Garcia in Ann Rev Appl Linguist 37:14–29, 2017) to imagine criteria beyond adequacy and remediation. With a glotopolitica lens rooted in the work of Latin American sociolinguists (Arnoux in Lengua y politica en America Latina: perspectivas actuales, Univerzita Palackeho v Olomouci, Olomouc, Czech Republic, pp 19–43, 2014; Blanco in Cuad Sur Letr 35–36(11):26, 2005), we conduct a genealogical analysis of language education policy for racialized bilinguals in the U.S. Linked to other decolonial projects, we propose a framework of educational dignity (Espinoza et al. in Mind Cult Act, 2020) that engages scholars, advocates, and educators in the U.S. and internationally in constructing language education policies according to racialized bilingual students’ own dignified logic rather than that of the nation-state, enabling racialized bilinguals to develop into historical actors (Gutierrez et al. in Mind Cult Act 26(4):291–308, 2019) emancipated from the logic of regulations that offer inclusion in colonialist paradigms rather than true liberation (de Sousa Santos, in Epistemologies of the South: justice against epistemicide, Paradigm Publishers, London, 2014). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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