Transforming a cemetery into a garden of languages: A justice-oriented, family-centered framework for cultivating early bilingualism and emergent biliteracy

IF 1.3 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Soojin Oh Park
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Abstract

One in three children enrolled in US early childhood programs is a dual language learner. While dual language learners have been the target of sweeping educational reforms under the guise of justice, these reforms—which pathologize dual language learners as problems to be remediated rather than assets to be developed—have largely ignored the priorities and experiences of young multilingual learners and their families. This historical omission of centering dual language learners in research, policy, and practice is unjust and has contributed to marginalization, homogenization, and linguistic erasure. Asian Americans, the second-largest group of dual language learners and the fastest-growing racial group in the USA, have remained an underexplored group of emergent bilinguals across early childhood research, practice, and policy. Thus, this article draws on the multilingual expertise of Asian American families of young dual language learners to portray how parents construct and navigate multiple knowledges, beliefs, and pedagogies of cultivating their children's dual language and literacy development. The key findings present a justice-centered framework that conceptualizes three cultivating practices across diverse spaces, borders, and time. Counterstories of planting, pollinating, and pruning position Asian immigrant parents as agentic gardeners of bilingualism and biliteracy, and interrogate the deficit paradigms that are too often placed on dual language learners to fit the narrow, monocultural, and monolingual definitions of school readiness. Centering Asian American families in generating theory and future research directions, this article envisions the future potentiality of early childhood education in pursuit of equity and transformative justice.
将墓地改造成语言花园:一个以正义为导向、以家庭为中心的框架,用于培养早期双语能力和新兴双语能力
每三名参加美国幼儿项目的儿童中就有一名是双语学习者。尽管双语学习者一直是打着正义幌子进行全面教育改革的目标,但这些改革在很大程度上忽视了年轻的多语言学习者及其家人的优先事项和经验。这些改革将双语学习者视为需要补救的问题,而非需要开发的资产。这种在研究、政策和实践中以双语学习者为中心的历史遗漏是不公正的,并导致了边缘化、同质化和语言消失。亚裔美国人是美国第二大双语学习者群体,也是增长最快的种族群体,在幼儿研究、实践和政策方面,他们仍然是一个未被充分挖掘的新兴双语群体。因此,本文借鉴了年轻双语学习者的亚裔美国家庭的多语言专业知识,描绘了父母如何构建和驾驭培养孩子双语和识字发展的多种知识、信仰和教学方法。关键发现提出了一个以正义为中心的框架,该框架概念化了跨越不同空间、边界和时间的三种培养实践。对种植、授粉和修剪的反驳将亚洲移民父母定位为双语和双语的代理人园丁,并质疑经常被置于双语学习者身上的缺陷范式,以适应对入学准备的狭隘、单一文化和单语定义。本文围绕亚裔美国家庭的生成理论和未来的研究方向,展望了幼儿教育在追求公平和变革正义方面的未来潜力。
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来源期刊
Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood
Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood (CIEC) is a peer-reviewed international research journal. The journal provides a forum for researchers and professionals who are exploring new and alternative perspectives in their work with young children (from birth to eight years of age) and their families. CIEC aims to present opportunities for scholars to highlight the ways in which the boundaries of early childhood studies and practice are expanding, and for readers to participate in the discussion of emerging issues, contradictions and possibilities.
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