Towards a critical translanguaging biliteracy pedagogy: the ‘aha moment’ stories of two Mandarin Chinese teachers in Canada

IF 1.5 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Literacy Pub Date : 2023-04-25 DOI:10.1111/lit.12323
Jing Jin, Yina Liu
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Abstract

Learning Mandarin Chinese as a heritage or additional language at Chinese complementary schools has long been a tradition for many Asian Canadians. However, research that looks at teachers' experiences and perceptions in Canadian settings, especially the power dynamics embedded in biliteracy development at complementary schools, is scant. Moreover, the COVID-19 pandemic brought challenges and opportunities to Chinese complementary schools. In this paper, we, as two Mandarin teachers and literacy researchers, used collaborative autobiographical narrative inquiry to tell our stories to unfold (1) how power dynamics regarding biliteracy/multiliteracy were enacted and reflected in a Chinese complementary school during the pandemic and (2) our re-understanding of Mandarin teaching and learning from critical literacy and translanguaging perspectives. Although the pandemic is over, racial discrimination and social inequity continue to remain in our lives. By analysing our teaching moments and reflections, we hope this study could provide some insights into how critical literacy and translanguaging can be integrated into language and literacy education in multilingual and multimodal settings in the pandemic and post-pandemic contexts.

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迈向关键的跨语言双语教学法:两位加拿大普通话教师的“顿悟时刻”故事
长期以来,在汉语补充学校学习普通话作为一种传统或附加语言一直是许多亚裔加拿大人的传统。然而,研究加拿大环境中教师的经历和看法,特别是互补学校双语发展中的权力动态的研究很少。此外,新冠肺炎疫情给中国的互补学校带来了挑战和机遇。在本文中,我们作为两位普通话教师和识字研究者,使用合作的自传体叙事探究来讲述我们的故事,以展开(1)在疫情期间,有关两文/多文性的权力动态是如何在一所中文补充学校中产生和反映的,以及(2)我们从批判性识字和跨语言的角度重新理解普通话教学。尽管疫情已经结束,但种族歧视和社会不平等仍然存在于我们的生活中。通过分析我们的教学时刻和反思,我们希望这项研究能够为如何在疫情和疫情后的多语言和多模式环境中将批判性识字和跨语言融入语言和识字教育提供一些见解。[发件人]Literacy版权归Wiley Blackwell所有,未经版权持有人明确书面许可,不得将其内容复制或通过电子邮件发送到多个网站或发布到listserv。但是,用户可以打印、下载或通过电子邮件发送文章供个人使用。这可能会被删节。对复印件的准确性不作任何保证。用户应参考材料的原始发布版本以获取完整信息。(版权适用于所有人。)
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来源期刊
Literacy
Literacy Multiple-
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
7.70%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: Literacy is the official journal of the United Kingdom Literacy Association (formerly the United Kingdom Reading Association), the professional association for teachers of literacy. Literacy is a refereed journal for those interested in the study and development of literacy. Its readership comprises practitioners, teacher educators, researchers and both undergraduate and graduate students. Literacy offers educators a forum for debate through scrutinising research evidence, reflecting on analysed accounts of innovative practice and examining recent policy developments.
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