索马里移民青年和印刷识字的力量

Q1 Arts and Humanities Writing Systems Research Pub Date : 2015-01-02 DOI:10.1080/17586801.2014.896771
Martha Bigelow, K. King
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引用次数: 21

摘要

这篇文章探讨了在现今的学校和教室里,索马里难民和移民中,书面剧本政治的一些方式。分析的重点是在美国一所全是移民的高中教室里收集索马里青年的数据。研究数据以说明全球进程如何在日常课堂互动中发挥作用,其中一些进程是在几十年的时间尺度上发展起来的,包括关于索马里剧本的决定、索马里内战和索马里侨民的兴起。在这里,我们通过探索索马里印刷品识字的象征力量与当前课堂实践和非正式政策之间的动态关系,扩展了关于学习新语言时家庭语言读写和学校教育的认知和教育益处的学术对话。这些发现说明了索马里文字的历史、接受正规教育的性别差异以及掌握索马里文字的好处是如何在学校的日常互动中发挥作用的。我们记录了索马里文字素养是索马里青少年如何将自己和他人视为学习者和个体的组成部分。
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Somali immigrant youths and the power of print literacy
This article examines some of the ways in which the politics of a written script are enacted among Somali refugees and immigrants in present-day schools and classrooms. Analysis focuses on data gathered with Somali youths in one all-immigrant high school classroom in the US. Data are examined to illustrate how global processes, some of which have developed across timescales of multiple decades, including the decision about a Somali script, the Somali civil war(s) and the rise of Somali Diaspora, play out in everyday classroom interactions. Here we extend the academic conversation about the cognitive and educational benefit of home language literacy and schooling when learning a new language by exploring the dynamic relationship between the symbolic power of Somali print literacy on the one hand, and current classroom practices and informal policies on the other. These findings illustrate how the history of the Somali script, differential access to formal schooling along gender lines and the benefit of having print literacy in Somali play out in everyday interactions at school. We document ways in which Somali print literacy is integral to how Somali adolescents see themselves and others as learners and individuals.
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Writing Systems Research
Writing Systems Research Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
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