Bilingual beyond school: Students’ language ideologies in bilingual programs in south-central Spain
Autor (es)
Poveda Bicknell, David Patrick
Entidad
UAM. Departamento de Psicología Evolutiva y de la EducaciónEditor
FahrenHouse: Salamanca, EspañaFecha de edición
2019-07-01Cita
10.14516/fde.700
Foro de Educación 17.27 (2019): 11-36
ISSN
1698-7802DOI
10.14516/fde.700Financiado por
The research Project «The Appropriation of English as a Global Language in Castilla-La Mancha Schools: A multilingual, situated and comparative approach» – APINGLO-CLM – (Ref.: FFI2014-54179-C2-2-P), funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO), 2015-2018Proyecto
Gobierno de España. FFI2014-54179-C2-2-PVersión del editor
https://doi.org/10.14516/fde.700Materias
Adolescent Students; Bilingual Education; Language Ideologies; Linguistic Ethnography; EducaciónResumen
This article examines adolescent and late adolescent discourses on bilingualism, bilingual education and the role of English and other additional languages in the current out-of-school lives and future trajectories of Spanish students enrolled in bilingual education programs. The data is part of a larger critical sociolinguistic ethnographic project on the implementation of bilingual education programs in secondary education (organized as English-Spanish CLIL) in Castilla-La Mancha, a region in South-Central Spain. Discourses were mainly elicited through a series of workshop-type and group discussion activities held in classrooms from two semi-private and two public schools, as well as an additional focus group conducted with university students. In total, 12 group events, involving approximately 300 students, were organized and documented through video-recordings, audio-recordings, photographs and fieldnotes. Students’ language ideologies around bilingualism are examined through an inductive qualitative / grounded theory approach. Three themes are identified: (a) the definition of bilingualism and bilingual competence, (b) the place of English (and other additional languages) in students’ current lives and social experiences and; (c) the role assigned to English in future employment and mobility opportunities. These discourses are discussed in relation to recent critical sociolinguistic work on the interconnection between language, multilingualism and neoliberalism. The paper closes with some methodological thoughts regarding the place of linguistic ethnography in the analysis of students’ collective discourses
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Google Scholar:Poveda Bicknell, David Patrick
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