Angelica Galante, Enrica Piccardo, Faith Marcel, Lana F Zeaiter, John Wayne N dela Cruz, Aisha Barise
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Digital pedagogies of empowerment are needed to shift discourses on marginalization, facilitate additional language learning, and sustain multilingualism. Grounded in plurilingualism and decoloniality as theoretical frameworks, this transformative mixed methods study explored the affordances of PluriDigit, a plurilingual, decolonial, and digital approach to language learning. This study was conducted with thirty six language learners enrolled in online language courses in a multilingual program in São Paulo, Brazil. We explored whether learners’ plurilingual and pluricultural identities and competence would change over time and the potential emergent contributions of PluriDigit to learner empowerment. Results from inductive and deductive analyses of three types of data indicate a shift in learners’ mindset from monolingual to plurilingual and pluricultural identity and a significant increase in plurilingual and pluricultural competence scores over time. Moreover, results show that PluriDigit offered a critical lens to plurilingualism, facilitating decolonial learning, agency, and relationality, as well as the development of voice in the target language. We argue that PluriDigit is one possibility of digital decolonial pedagogy that can empower language learners in the Global South and beyond.
期刊介绍:
Applied Linguistics publishes research into language with relevance to real-world problems. The journal is keen to help make connections between fields, theories, research methods, and scholarly discourses, and welcomes contributions which critically reflect on current practices in applied linguistic research. It promotes scholarly and scientific discussion of issues that unite or divide scholars in applied linguistics. It is less interested in the ad hoc solution of particular problems and more interested in the handling of problems in a principled way by reference to theoretical studies.