Exploring the pedagogical potential of translanguaging in peer reading interactions




Tigert Johanna, Groff James, Martin-Beltrán Melinda,
Peercy Megan, Silverman Rebecca

MacSwan Jeff, Faltis Christian

2019

Codeswitching in the Classroom: Critical Perspectives on Teaching, Learning, Policy, and Ideology

65

87

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9781315401102-3



Classrooms in the United States are increasingly becoming “linguistic contact zones” (Cazden, Kwek & Comber, 2009, p. 1), where students’ language varieties coexist with schools’ dominant English discourses. However, students’ full linguistic repertoires are rarely recognized as resources in academic spaces that continue to rely on English as the dominant medium of instruction (García & Flores, 2014; Menken & Kleyn, 2010). In our study, we explore dynamic language practices of emergent bilingual students during cross-age peer tutoring interactions within officially designated monolingual instructional settings.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:43