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Learning English at school : identity, social relations, and classroom practice / Kelleen Toohey.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Bilingual education and bilingualism ; 20.Publisher: Clevedon [England] ; Buffalo : Multilingual Matters, 2000Description: vii, 152 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1853594814
  • 9781853594816
  • 1853594822
  • 9781853594823
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Learning English at school.DDC classification:
  • 428.007 21
LOC classification:
  • PE1128.A2 T63 2000
Contents:
Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- 1. Framing Story: Theory, Setting and Methodology -- Learners and Learning in Second Language Acquisition Research -- Learners as Socially/Historically/Politically Constructed -- Learning as Socially/Historically/Politically Constructed -- The Sociality of Development -- The Dialogic Perspective -- Communities of Practice -- Research Questions -- The Research Site -- Methodology -- 2. Kindergarten Stories -- Life in Kindergarten -- The Children's Stories -- Coda -- 3. Constructing School Identities: Kindergarten Meta-stories -- Being a Child/Becoming a Student -- Aspects of School Identity -- 4. 'Break them up, take them away': Practices in the Grade 1 Classroom -- Sitting in Your Own Desk -- Using Your Own Things -- Using Your Own Words and Ideas -- 5. Discursive Practices in Grade 2 Language Arts Lessons -- Language Arts Lessons -- Recitation sequences -- Teacher-Mandated Partner and Small Group Conversations -- Student-Managed Conversations -- 6. Appropriating Voices and Telling Stories -- Identity, Resource Distribution and Discourse Practices in Classrooms -- Access to Voice -- Facilitating Access -- Instructional Conversations -- The Politics of Representation -- Conversations, Not Collaborations -- Future SLA Research -- References -- Index.
Review: "This book focuses on a common set of circumstances in Canada, the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand in which increasing numbers of young children from minority language backgrounds are taught in mainstream English-medium classrooms. It provides a longitudinal ethnography of a group of children learning English in a Canadian school, from the beginning of kindergarten to the end of Grade 2. Throughout, sociocultural, poststructural and critical theories inform examinations of the children's classrooms as communities that have specific practices. Data collected in each of the three grades are used to explore how practices with respect to identity construction, resource distribution, and discursive organization affect the children's possibilities for learning English."--Jacket.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- 1. Framing Story: Theory, Setting and Methodology -- Learners and Learning in Second Language Acquisition Research -- Learners as Socially/Historically/Politically Constructed -- Learning as Socially/Historically/Politically Constructed -- The Sociality of Development -- The Dialogic Perspective -- Communities of Practice -- Research Questions -- The Research Site -- Methodology -- 2. Kindergarten Stories -- Life in Kindergarten -- The Children's Stories -- Coda -- 3. Constructing School Identities: Kindergarten Meta-stories -- Being a Child/Becoming a Student -- Aspects of School Identity -- 4. 'Break them up, take them away': Practices in the Grade 1 Classroom -- Sitting in Your Own Desk -- Using Your Own Things -- Using Your Own Words and Ideas -- 5. Discursive Practices in Grade 2 Language Arts Lessons -- Language Arts Lessons -- Recitation sequences -- Teacher-Mandated Partner and Small Group Conversations -- Student-Managed Conversations -- 6. Appropriating Voices and Telling Stories -- Identity, Resource Distribution and Discourse Practices in Classrooms -- Access to Voice -- Facilitating Access -- Instructional Conversations -- The Politics of Representation -- Conversations, Not Collaborations -- Future SLA Research -- References -- Index.

"This book focuses on a common set of circumstances in Canada, the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand in which increasing numbers of young children from minority language backgrounds are taught in mainstream English-medium classrooms. It provides a longitudinal ethnography of a group of children learning English in a Canadian school, from the beginning of kindergarten to the end of Grade 2. Throughout, sociocultural, poststructural and critical theories inform examinations of the children's classrooms as communities that have specific practices. Data collected in each of the three grades are used to explore how practices with respect to identity construction, resource distribution, and discursive organization affect the children's possibilities for learning English."--Jacket.

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