“Free License to Communicate”: Licensing Black Language against White Supremacist Language Assessments in a PreK Classroom

IF 1.6 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Research in the Teaching of English Pub Date : 2022-11-15 DOI:10.58680/rte202232152
Alice Y. Lee
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The policing of Black Language is inextricably tied to the policing of Black people and is entrenched in a long history of white Western European colonization. The legacies of white supremacy pervade schooling in its earliest years, yet Black teachers have consistently mounted a counterforce in battling white hegemony. In this article, I feature one such teacher, Raniya, who licensed Black Language in her preK classroom. Based on three months of classroom observations and interviews, this ethnographic case study explores the institutional architecture that affords white supremacist language assessments, particularly through an epistemology of language as an abstracted entity and through its process of curricularization. A raciolinguistic perspective illuminated how the white teachers at Raniya’s school insisted on broadly dehumanizing students of color through a schoolwide policy based on white monolingual standards. Drawing on notion of “vernacular insurrections,” I juxtapose white teachers’ raciolinguistic ideologies with Raniya’s practices. She claimed her classroom as a critical vernacular site through her approach of student language as a practice, and by subverting the normalcy of white hegemony within the schoolwide assessment process. This article calls for a shift in thinking about skills-based, decontextualized approaches as inherently white supremacist, and excavates how such a language approach supports white supremacy to thrive. I discuss the significance of centering the fight against white supremacy in our analysis of literary practices, which elucidates the potency of even small amounts of white dominance in institutional mechanisms as detrimental for Black students. As a field, the stagnation of Black student equity and commitment to white hegemony by white educators and administrators across preK through higher education persists. Though some white educators diverge from hegemonic practices, we must consider who benefits and what is sustained when exceptions are used to overlook and not interrogate the norm. This work contributes to the mounting rationales for racial diversification in the teacher workforce.
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“自由交流许可证”:在PreK课堂上允许黑人语言对抗白人至上主义语言评估
对黑人语言的监管与对黑人的监管有着千丝万缕的联系,并且在西欧白人殖民的悠久历史中根深蒂固。白人至上主义的遗产在早期的学校教育中普遍存在,但黑人教师一直在与白人霸权作斗争。在这篇文章中,我介绍了一位这样的老师,拉尼亚,她在她的学前班课堂上使用黑人语言。基于三个月的课堂观察和访谈,这个民族志案例研究探索了提供白人至上主义者语言评估的制度架构,特别是通过语言作为抽象实体的认识论及其课程化过程。从种族语言学的角度来看,拉尼娅所在学校的白人教师坚持通过一项基于白人单语标准的全校政策,广泛地剥夺有色人种学生的人性。利用“方言起义”的概念,我将白人教师的种族语言意识形态与拉尼亚的实践并置。她通过将学生语言作为一种实践的方法,并通过在全校范围内的评估过程中颠覆白人霸权的常态,声称她的课堂是一个批判性的白话场所。本文呼吁转变思维,将基于技能的、非语境化的方法视为本质上的白人至上主义,并挖掘这种语言方法如何支持白人至上主义蓬勃发展。我讨论了在我们对文学实践的分析中以反对白人至上主义为中心的重要性,这阐明了即使是在制度机制中少数白人主导地位对黑人学生也是有害的。从学前班到高等教育,黑人学生平等的停滞不前,以及白人教育者和管理者对白人霸权的承诺仍然存在。尽管一些白人教育工作者与霸权主义的做法有分歧,但我们必须考虑,当例外被用来忽视而不是质疑规范时,谁会受益,什么会得到维持。这项工作为教师队伍的种族多样化提供了越来越多的理由。
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
Research in the Teaching of English
Research in the Teaching of English EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Research in the Teaching of English (RTE) is a broad-based, multidisciplinary journal composed of original research articles and short scholarly essays on a wide range of topics significant to those concerned with the teaching and learning of languages and literacies around the world, both in and beyond schools and universities.
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