INTRODUCTION: Language, Identity and Educational Policies, Volume 2

Q3 Social Sciences
Sylvie A. Lamoureux, Normand Labrie
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In Canada, as is true in several other countries and educational jurisdictions, language and identity are at the forefront of both educational debates and policy development in various governing bodies, such as the classroom, schools, school boards, postsecondary institutions, provincial, territorial and federal ministries, as well as arms-length and nongovernmental agencies (NGOs). Policymaking and implementation decisions occur at micro and macro social levels within each of these contexts. This double special issue of the Canadian Journal of Education (RCE/CJE 33[2] and [3]) presents findings of original research on language, identity, and educational policy in Canada since 2000, from a variety of theoretical perspectives, including sociolinguistics, psychology, higher education, sociology of education, policy studies, and second language education. We aim to interest a wide readership of researchers, educators, and policy makers, in the hope that the studies presented will encourage and foster a trans-disciplinary dialogue. The response to our call for papers exceeded our expectations, with manuscripts being submitted from across Canada, and also from researchers outside Canada who were interested in Canadian educational policies. We are grateful to all those who submitted manuscripts for consideration, and the confidence they demonstrated in the Canadian Journal of Education, and our special issue on language, identity, and educational policy in Canada. In recognition of the large number of manuscripts received, the CJE editorial board graciously offered to publish the special issue in two volumes, which allowed us to maintain an acceptance ratio of about 30 per cent. We are grateful to the CJE team, particularly Julia and Deb, although we regret having had to refuse manuscripts that, because of their findings, would have fitted very well in our special issue, but for which we simply had no latitude. We also wish to express our gratitude to the external reviewers who shared their scientific recommendations with us, and provided authors with valuable feedback, enabling us to ensure the integrity of CJE's editorial standards. When it came time to organise the architecture for the two volumes of this special issue, the circle metaphor could not be ignored. We first saw the circle as a space for completeness, dialogue, consensus building, and wisdom, as shared with us by Canada's aboriginal cultures. We also saw both sides of a coin, which, in Western culture, reminds of dichotomies and dialogism. Finally, we thought of yin and yang, which in oriental philosophy are representations of opposite yet interdependent forces of the natural order, one engendering the other. It is in this spirit that the first volume (CJR/RCE 33[2]) presents articles focused on the "teaching" dimension, whereas this second volume (RCE/CJE 33[3]) focuses on the "learning" dimension. The first volume took a closer look at the mediation that belies language and identity in educational contexts, whereas this second volume highlights learners' representations and practices. We began the first volume with articles on teaching Aboriginal languages, French as first language in a minority context, then on multilingualism and multiculturalism in teaching. This volume, the second, looks at biliteracy within French first-language in a minority context schools, learning French as a second language in Core French and French immersion settings, as well as immigrant adults learning English as a second language. We then come full circle with a reflection on research practices that respect Aboriginal cultures. As a whole, these articles, mostly written in English, but with two in French, present an excellent pan-Canadian perspective of the politics, representations, and practices regarding language and identity in teaching and learning during the first decade of the this new century. VOLUME 1 The first volume of the special issue, (RCE/CJE 33[2])), begins with an article by M. …
引言:语言、身份与教育政策,第二卷
在加拿大,就像在其他几个国家和教育辖区一样,语言和身份是各种管理机构(如课堂、学校、学校董事会、高等教育机构、省、地区和联邦部委,以及独立和非政府机构)的教育辩论和政策制定的前沿。政策制定和执行决策发生在这些背景下的微观和宏观社会层面。本期《加拿大教育杂志》(RCE/CJE 33[2]和[3])特刊从社会语言学、心理学、高等教育、教育社会学、政策研究和第二语言教育等多个理论视角,介绍了2000年以来加拿大语言、身份认同和教育政策的原创性研究成果。我们的目标是引起研究人员、教育工作者和政策制定者的广泛读者的兴趣,希望所提出的研究将鼓励和促进跨学科的对话。对论文征集的回应超出了我们的预期,有来自加拿大各地的稿件,也有来自加拿大以外对加拿大教育政策感兴趣的研究人员。我们感谢所有提交稿件的人,感谢他们对《加拿大教育杂志》和我们关于加拿大语言、身份和教育政策的特刊所表现出的信心。鉴于收到的大量稿件,CJE编辑委员会慷慨地提出将特刊分两卷出版,这使我们能够保持约30%的接受率。我们感谢CJE团队,特别是Julia和Deb,尽管我们很遗憾不得不拒绝那些由于他们的发现而非常适合我们特刊的稿件,但我们根本没有自由。我们也要感谢外部审稿人与我们分享他们的科学建议,并为作者提供了宝贵的反馈,使我们能够确保CJE编辑标准的完整性。当为这两卷特刊组织建筑时,圆圈的隐喻不能被忽视。我们首先将圆圈视为一个完整、对话、建立共识和智慧的空间,这是加拿大土著文化与我们共享的。我们也看到了硬币的两面,在西方文化中,这让人想起二分法和对话。最后,我们想到了阴和阳,在东方哲学中,阴和阳是自然秩序中对立但相互依存的力量的表现,一个产生另一个。正是本着这种精神,第一卷(CJR/RCE 33[3])的文章集中在“教学”维度,而第二卷(RCE/ cce 33[3])的文章集中在“学习”维度。第一卷更仔细地研究了在教育背景下掩盖语言和身份的中介,而第二卷则强调了学习者的表征和实践。第一卷的开头是关于土著语言教学的文章,法语作为少数民族背景下的第一语言,然后是教学中的多语言和多元文化。第二卷着眼于少数民族背景下法语第一语言学校的双语能力,在核心法语和法语浸入式环境中学习法语作为第二语言,以及成年移民学习英语作为第二语言。然后,我们绕了一圈,反思尊重土著文化的研究实践。总的来说,这些文章,大部分是用英语写的,但有两篇是用法语写的,呈现了一个优秀的泛加拿大视角,在这个新世纪的第一个十年里,在教学和学习中,关于语言和身份的政治、表征和实践。第1卷特刊的第一卷(RCE/CJE 33[2])以M. ...的一篇文章开头
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Canadian Journal of Education
Canadian Journal of Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
60
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal of Education (CJE) is a national peer-reviewed journal sponsored by the membership of the Canadian Society for the Study of Education. The CJE prioritizes research and scholarly writing that is of relevance to the Canadian education community. The journal is read by scholars worldwide, and aims to represent the valuable contributions that Canadian scholars in education continue to make to the field. The Journal accepts and publishes both French and English articles and book reviews. CJE on occasion also publishes international papers that shed light on shared issues and that include Canadian authors as references.
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