This study examined classroom discourse in two Spanish language courses for Spanish-English bilingual students at a large university in central Texas, in order to investigate the ways that participants used language to construct their linguistic and cultural identities. The study found that students’ identities as bilinguals are linked to socially constructed discourses on the value of different language varieties and cultural experiences that draw from an oversimplification of the reality of the sociolinguistic world. Participants constructed essentialized categories of different kinds of U.S. Hispanics, often assuming an essential connection between language and identity. Students constructed their identities by positioning themselves and others within these categories and by constructing their language skills and cultural backgrounds as either a value or a deficit. Results suggest the need to further develop methodologies for raising heritage language learners’ consciousness about the heteroglossic nature of the social world.
2024. Resistances to critical language awareness: understanding the role of social class and double consciousness. Critical Inquiry in Language Studies► pp. 1 ff.
2023. Bilingual student perspectives about language expertise in a gentrifying two-way immersion program. International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism 26:1 ► pp. 34 ff.
Zhou, Yue & Yongcan Liu
2023. Theorising the dynamics of heritage language identity development: a narrative inquiry of the life histories of three Chinese heritage speakers. Language and Education 37:3 ► pp. 383 ff.
Bonomi, Milin
2022. social value of Spanish among transnational Latin American families in Italy. Sociolinguistic Studies 16:2-3
Gómez García, Eva
2022. Examining the Influence of Spanish Heritage Language Learners’ Critical Language Awareness (CLA) Development on Ethnic Identity Formation. Languages 7:3 ► pp. 190 ff.
Magaña, Dalia & Lorraine Ramos
2022. Amplifying Latinx Students’ Voices about Bilingual Experiences: A Critical Metaphor Analysis. Heritage Language Journal 19:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
2021. “It’s Not Fair”: Discourses of Deficit, Equity, and Effort in Mixed Heritage and Second Language Spanish Classes. Journal of Language, Identity & Education 20:6 ► pp. 425 ff.
Yilmaz, Tuba
2021. Translanguaging as a pedagogy for equity of language minoritized students. International Journal of Multilingualism 18:3 ► pp. 435 ff.
Capdevila Gutiérrez, María & Fernando Rodríguez-Valls
2020. La poesía en el aula de doble inmersión: Claves didácticas y de concienciación para el desarrollo de literacidad crítica e identidad. Journal of Latinos and Education 19:3 ► pp. 219 ff.
Catalano, Theresa & Linda R. Waugh
2020. CDA/CDS and Its Interdisciplinary Connections. In Critical Discourse Analysis, Critical Discourse Studies and Beyond [Perspectives in Pragmatics, Philosophy & Psychology, 26], ► pp. 247 ff.
Goble, Ryan A.
2020. Stancetaking and heritage language production: the untold stories of spoken Spanish among third-generation “receptive” bilinguals. Critical Inquiry in Language Studies 17:4 ► pp. 247 ff.
Hernández Cubo, Abraham
2020. <i>¿Hoy te has levantado o te levantaste?</i> Treatment of dialectal variation in the presentation of past tenses in L2 Spanish textbooks published in Spain. Estudios de Lingüística Aplicada :69 ► pp. 101 ff.
George, Angela & Anne Hoffman-González
2019. Dialect and identity. Study Abroad Research in Second Language Acquisition and International Education 4:2 ► pp. 252 ff.
Prada, Josh
2019. Exploring the role of translanguaging in linguistic ideological and attitudinal reconfigurations in the Spanish classroom for heritage speakers. Classroom Discourse 10:3-4 ► pp. 306 ff.
Showstack, Rachel & Drew Colcher
2019. Language ideologies, family language policy, and a changing societal context in Kansas. Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics 12:2 ► pp. 455 ff.
Kayi-Aydar, Hayriye
2018. Positional Identities, Access to Learning Opportunities, and Multiliteracies: Negotiations in Heritage and Non-heritage Spanish-Speaking Students’ Critical Narratives. In Multiliteracies Pedagogy and Language Learning, ► pp. 149 ff.
Dávila, Liv T.
2017. Ecologies of Heritage Language Learning in a Multilingual Swedish School. Journal of Language, Identity & Education 16:6 ► pp. 395 ff.
Liebscher, Grit & Jennifer Dailey‐O'Cain
2017. Contextualizing language attitudes: An interactional perspective. Language and Linguistics Compass 11:9
Aquino-Sterling, Cristian R. & Fernando Rodríguez-Valls
2016. DevelopingTeaching-SpecificSpanish Competencies in Bilingual Teacher Education: Toward a Culturally, Linguistically, and Professionally Relevant Approach. Multicultural Perspectives 18:2 ► pp. 73 ff.
Bayram, Fatih, Josh Prada, Diego Pascual y Cabo & Jason Rothman
2016. Why Should Formal Linguistic Approaches to Heritage Language Acquisition Be Linked to Heritage Language Pedagogies?. In Handbook of Comparative Studies on Community Colleges and Global Counterparts [Springer International Handbooks of Education, ], ► pp. 1 ff.
Bayram, Fatih, Josh Prada, Diego Pascual y Cabo & Jason Rothman
2018. Why Should Formal Linguistic Approaches to Heritage Language Acquisition Be Linked to Heritage Language Pedagogies?. In Handbook of Research and Practice in Heritage Language Education [Springer International Handbooks of Education, ], ► pp. 187 ff.
Bayram, Fatih, Josh Prada, Diego Pascual y Cabo & Jason Rothman
2018. Why Should Formal Linguistic Approaches to Heritage Language Acquisition Be Linked to Heritage Language Pedagogies?. In Handbook of Comparative Studies on Community Colleges and Global Counterparts [Springer International Handbooks of Education, ], ► pp. 1 ff.
Rao, Rajiv & Emily Kuder
2016. Research on Heritage Spanish Phonetics and Phonology: Pedagogical and Curricular Implications. Journal of New Approaches in Educational Research 5:2 ► pp. 99 ff.
Leeman, Jennifer
2015. Heritage Language Education and Identity in the United States. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics 35 ► pp. 100 ff.
Nieves, Aracelis
2015. The Impact of the Spanish for Fluent Speakers Curriculum on the Attitudes, Motivation, Self-esteem, Language Skills and Academic Future of Latino Students. NABE Journal of Research and Practice 6:1 ► pp. 158 ff.
Showstack, Rachel E.
2015. Institutional representations of ‘Spanish’ and ‘Spanglish’: managing competing discourses in heritage language instruction. Language and Intercultural Communication 15:3 ► pp. 341 ff.
Showstack, Rachel E.
2016. La pragmática transcultural de los hablantes de herencia de español: análisis e implicaciones pedagógicas. Journal of Spanish Language Teaching 3:2 ► pp. 143 ff.
Showstack, Rachel E.
2017. Stancetaking and Language Ideologies in Heritage Language Learner Classroom Discourse. Journal of Language, Identity & Education 16:5 ► pp. 271 ff.
Palmer, Deborah K., Ramón Antontio Martínez, Suzanne G. Mateus & Kathryn Henderson
2014. Reframing the Debate on Language Separation: Toward a Vision for Translanguaging Pedagogies in the Dual Language Classroom. The Modern Language Journal 98:3 ► pp. 757 ff.
Palmer, Deborah K., Ramón Antontio Martínez, Suzanne G. Mateus & Kathryn Henderson
2014. Reframing the Debate on Language Separation: Toward a Vision for Translanguaging Pedagogies in the Dual Language Classroom. The Modern Language Journal 98:3 ► pp. 757 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 30 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.