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E-raamat: Discourses, Identities and Investment in Foreign Language Learning

  • Formaat: 176 pages
  • Sari: Second Language Acquisition
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jul-2022
  • Kirjastus: Multilingual Matters
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781800415669
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 176 pages
  • Sari: Second Language Acquisition
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jul-2022
  • Kirjastus: Multilingual Matters
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781800415669

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"This book explores discourses of foreign language education in Ireland. It adopts a critical approach to SLA, examining the complex interplay between the construction of identity in the school context, discourses of language learning and investment in language learning"--

This book explores discourses of foreign language education in Ireland through an ethnographic lens. Taking a critical approach to SLA, it locates students’ language ideologies within wider discourses of language learning, such as discourses of gender and language learning and discourses of elite multilingualism. It also examines the role of the imagined identity in language learning investment in a world where English and a limited number of other ‘global’ languages dominate the foreign language learning experience. The ethnographic approach provides a unique insight into the way in which dominant discourses of identity, gender, and foreign language learning are both constructed and resisted in the institutional context, shaping our understanding of what it means to be a gendered being and what it means to be a language learner in a globalised world. This book will be of interest to postgraduate students and researchers in the fields of SLA and sociolinguistics, as well as language teachers and language policymakers.



This book explores discourses of foreign language education in Ireland. It adopts a critical approach to SLA, examining the complex interplay between the construction of identity in the school context, discourses of language learning and investment in language learning.

Arvustused

Jennifer Martyns book offers a valuable insight into the reality of bi- and multilingualism in a predominantly anglophone country. The Irish experience is deftly extrapolated and used as a starting point for an in-depth reflection on discourses around investment in foreign language learning. Indeed, the authors discussion of identities, power relations, and commodification of language and education is relevant to anyone involved in promoting and supporting multi- and plurilingualism. * Susanna Nocchi, TU Dublin, Ireland * This book offers a rare and valuable insight into secondary school students perceptions, experiences, and practices of foreign language learning. It sheds light on the dynamics of implicit factors underlying the construct of their learner identities. Bringing together the global and local, the theoretical and empirical, the book will appeal to practitioners, educators, researchers, and other key stakeholders in foreign language education policy. * Marie-Thérèse Batardière, University of Limerick, Ireland * This ambitious book offers rich insights into discourses of gender and language learning in an Irish secondary school context. Additionally, its exploration of central concepts in contemporary SLA research, such as identity, linguistic investment and elite multilingualism, make it a valuable resource for language scholars, educators and policymakers alike. * Jennifer Bruen, Dublin City University, Ireland * With many commendable features, the book makes an important contribution to the field. Its clear and expert exposition greatly facilitates the readers understanding of its content, and it thus lends itself to use in various courses and at various levels [ ...] Its innovative case-study approach will be of interest to all those involved in language education. * Martin Howard, University College Cork, Ireland, Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2023 *

Muu info

The first significant study to explore the foreign language learning experiences of secondary school students in Ireland
Acknowledgements vii
Transcription Conventions ix
Introduction 1(4)
Aims and Objectives
1(1)
Chapters and Structure
2(2)
Who is this Book for?
4(1)
1 Language Education in Ireland: Sociolinguistic and Scholarly Contexts
5(20)
Introduction
5(1)
Language Education in Ireland
6(12)
Situating this Book within SLA Research
18(6)
Conclusion
24(1)
2 Language Learning and Identity, Ideology and Elite Multilingualism
25(21)
Introduction
25(1)
Identity in SLA Research
26(7)
Imagined Identities and Language Ideologies
33(6)
Elite Multilingualism
39(5)
Conclusion
44(2)
3 Gender and Language Education: Theoretical Approaches and Current Trends
46(21)
Introduction
46(1)
Early Research on Language, Gender and Education
46(4)
Contemporary Approaches to Language, Gender and Sexuality
50(5)
Gender and Language Learning Scholarship
55(10)
Conclusion
65(2)
4 Fieldwork in SMSS: Community, Space and Identity
67(38)
Introduction
67(1)
Linguistic Ethnography
68(2)
Fieldwork
70(10)
Analysing the Data
80(4)
In the Community
84(4)
Discourses, Identities and Space
88(15)
Conclusion
103(2)
5 Language Choice, Discourse and Investment
105(26)
Introduction
105(1)
Language Choice in SMSS
105(5)
Language Learning Discourses
110(11)
Language Learning Investment and Imagined Identities
121(7)
Conclusion
128(3)
6 Addressing the Issues and Moving Forward
131(12)
Introduction
131(1)
Overview
131(4)
Implications
135(5)
Further Directions
140(3)
References 143(19)
Index 162
Jennifer Martyn is Assistant Professor at Dublin City University, Ireland. Her research interests include the sociolinguistics of language learning, language learning discourses, and gender and language learning.