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E-raamat: Learning and Not Learning in the Heritage Language Classroom: Engaging Mexican-Origin Students

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Learning and Not Learning in the Heritage Language Classroom, a critical ethnography, describes the first year of a teacher-founded charter high school and presents a case-study of compulsory Spanish heritage language instruction with two Spanish-language teachers, one English dominant and the other Spanish dominant. The study follows the same cohort of Mexican-origin students to their humanities-English class, bringing into focus what works and what does not with this group of learners. Unlike many Spanish heritage language studies, the students in this book did not choose to take part in Spanish class and thus provide unusually raw feedback on their teachers and classes. The engagement and resistance of these students suggests pedagogical directions for engaging Spanish heritage language learners. The book will be of interest to scholars, administrators, students and teachers involved in the delivery and assessment of heritage language classes.

Arvustused

This book deftly demonstrates why teachers of heritage speakers must be culturally and linguistically sensitive, utilize students strengths and community knowledge, and engage critically via relevant materials. Readers come away understanding how doing otherwise can lead to exacerbation of societal power imbalances and student non-participation. Important cautionaries for teacher professional development abound. * Kim Potowski, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA * In this compelling ethnographic portrait of the challenges of heritage language study, Helmer exposes the intricate interplay of identity, community and institutionality through the critical conceptual lens of resistance. Her artfully woven narrative not only sheds intimate light on the social and political situation of the nations burgeoning young Latinx population but on the possibilities for educational reform in general. * Andrew Lynch, University of Miami, USA * This ethnography offers a detailed picture of a high school context in which the varied and complex content and language-learning challenges encountered by Mexican-origin, heritage learners are richly described. It is well written, detailed, and reflects the caring perspective of its author. I recommend it highly. * Guadalupe Valdés, Stanford University, USA * The author is a powerful storyteller, who will attract lay and specialized readers with her colorful anecdotes. She weaves personal and academic accounts vividly, and provides laughter, suspense, and climatic moments along the chapters. -- Laura Dubcovsky, University of California, Davis, USA * LINGUIST List 31.3586 * Through its well-balanced pattern of narrative, theory, broader contextualization, and analysis, the unique characteristics of this ethnography become generalizable to the circumstances of early and experienced HL teachers, teacher preparation professionals, and administrators [ ...] In sum, this is an important, well-written study which stakeholders at many levels may use to more fully understand heritage language learning and teaching. -- Sarah Kersten Albrecht, University of Arizona, USA * Hispania 104, March 2021 *

Muu info

Provides unique and frank insights into Mexican-origin student engagement with and resistance to learning Spanish as a heritage language
Acknowledgements ix
1 Beginnings and Endings
1(16)
Camping with Downtown High
1(12)
Charter School and Research Project Beginnings
13(4)
2 From Cecilia Paulson to Downtown High School, Research Questions, Methodology and Theoretical Frameworks
17(25)
The Emergence of Research Questions
20(6)
Doing Research at DHS: Research Design and Methodology
26(1)
Theoretical Frameworks
27(5)
The Ethnographic Context and Practicalities
32(1)
Participants
33(4)
Data Collection
37(3)
Conclusion
40(2)
3 Hablais Como Pachucos
42(31)
Bigotry and the Borderlands
46(3)
Resistance through Non-participation: Some Theoretical Explanations
49(4)
Non-participation in a Spanish Class for Heritage Learners: The Ethnographic Context
53(1)
Classrooms and Lessons
54(10)
Discussion
64(5)
Reflections of a Participant-Observer
69(4)
4 It's Not Real: It's Just Spanish Class
73(42)
A New Teacher is Found: Semester II Spanish
74(5)
Heritage Language Learner Characteristics
79(11)
Classroom Lessons, Data Analysis and Discussion: Performance Strike! (Again)!
90(17)
The Year Winds Down: Yearbooks and Safe Houses
107(5)
Reflections of a Participant-Observer
112(3)
5 The Tao of Teaching
115(44)
Part 1 Semester 1, from Spanish to Humanities, the Ethnographic Context
117(17)
Part 2 Semester 2 Winds Down, Fictionmania
134(20)
Discussion
154(3)
Reflections of a Participant-Observer
157(2)
6 Place and Project-based Spanish Heritage Language Teaching and Learning
159(39)
Spanish Instruction: Ethnographic Views
160(10)
Pedagogical Suggestions: Student Views
170(4)
Imagination, Experience, Awareness and Acquisition: Frameworks for a Pueblo-based Pedagogy
174(11)
Projects and Themes for Critical "Pueblo-based" Spanish HL Instruction
185(9)
Final Thoughts: Caring Rigor and Imagination
194(4)
7 Then and Now
198(27)
Final Visits
198(12)
Findings Synthesis: Identity, Ideology and Imagination
210(3)
Institutional Factors Contributing to Resistance and Engagement
213(10)
Closing Remarks
223(2)
Appendices
225(5)
Appendix A Transcription Conventions
225(1)
Appendix B Principal's Letter to Participants' Parents
226(1)
Appendix C Student Interview Questions
227(3)
References 230(15)
Index 245
Kimberly Adilia Helmer is a Teaching Professor in the Writing Program at the University of California Santa Cruz, USA. Her research interests include Latino/a student engagement in learning and the pedagogies that support that learning; multilingual writers and writing; and English for Academic Purposes.