Raciolinguistic chronotopes and the education of Latinx students: Resistance and anxiety in a bilingual school

Publication date: September 2018 Source:Language & Communication, Volume 62 Author(s): Nelson Flores, Mark C. Lewis, Jennifer Phuong A major assumption of critical applied linguistics has been that changing the language attitudes of individual teachers will lead to the development of more linguistically responsive classrooms. Yet, despite decades of such efforts, linguistically responsive classrooms remain the exception rather than the norm. As an explanation for this lack of progress, we propose a raciolinguistic chronotope perspective that brings attention to the broader socio-historical processes that shape the institutional listening subject position teachers inhabit in relation to their students. We apply this raciolinguistic chronotope perspective to classroom interactions collected as part of a multi-year ethnographic study of a bilingual charter school. We end with implications of this raciolinguistic chronotope perspective for re-conceptualizing interventions focused on developing linguistically responsive classrooms.
Source: Language and Communication - Category: Speech-Language Pathology Source Type: research