Voice of the voiceless? Multiethnic student voices in critical approaches to race, pedagogy, literacy and agency

Posted in Articles, Latino Studies, Media Archive, Teaching Resources, United States on 2013-07-23 04:27Z by Steven

Voice of the voiceless? Multiethnic student voices in critical approaches to race, pedagogy, literacy and agency

Linguistics and Education
Volume 24, Issue 3, September 2013
pages 348–360
DOI: 10.1016/j.linged.2013.03.005

Benji Chang, Adjunct Assistant Professor and Postdoctoral Fellow
Department of Curriculum & Teaching
Teachers College, Columbia University, New York

In this article, the author utilizes critical and sociocultural approaches to race, language and culture to examine the intersectional experiences of a multiethnic and ‘mixed race’ cohort of students in an inner-city, working-class neighborhood between their elementary and high school years. This article examines the students’ experiences in a nine-year educational process focused on critical pedagogy, sociocultural learning, and community engagement in and out of classrooms. More specifically, the article looks at interview, participant observation, and narrative data with a Latina/o and Asian American male student, and an Asian American female student, and how they made sense of their experiences over time with regards to issues of race, pedagogy, literacy, and agency.

Highlights

  • Critical race, ethnic studies, and sociocultural theory are used to examine K-12 student voices.
  • Classroom teaching, parent engagement and community organizing are discussed.
  • Asian American, multiethnic and ‘mixed race’ contexts help challenge race, culture and achievement paradigms.
  • Student cultural, linguistic and literacy practices are built upon toward transformative outcomes.
  • 9 years of data are used to inform more dynamic and sustainable approaches toward educational equity.

Read or purchase the article here.

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“My dad is samurai”: Positioning of race and ethnicity surrounding a transnational Colombian Japanese high school student

Posted in Articles, Asian Diaspora, Campus Life, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2013-05-23 20:42Z by Steven

“My dad is samurai”: Positioning of race and ethnicity surrounding a transnational Colombian Japanese high school student

Linguistics and Education
Available Online: 2013-05-22
DOI: 10.1016/j.linged.2013.03.002

Satoko Shao-Kobayashi
Chiba University, Japan

Highlights

  • Racial hierarchies in different countries impact transnational students’ positioning in local contexts.
  • Participants Other coethnics by using various labels to destigmatize their own minority positions.
  • Racial mixedness is variously interpreted and represented in the identity negotiation.
  • Social stratification of dominance and subordination is reenacted through Othering of coethnics.

From sociocultural, interactional and critical perspectives, this study investigates the practices and ideologies of racial and ethnic identities and relationships surrounding Jun, a Colombian Japanese high school student, within a transnational Japanese student community at Pearl High School (pseudonym) in California. In particular, the analysis focuses on how Jun’s racial and ethnic positioning is interpreted and represented by others and himself through examining their labeling and categorization practices. I utilized the analysis of two-year ethnography, in-depth discourse analysis of narratives and conversations and mental map analysis. The study shows how Jun and other participants interactionally negotiated their racial and ethnic identities and relationships by strategically positioning each other in an attempt to survive in the environment where they were marginalized. The study illuminates the dynamics and politics of inter-/intraracial and ethnic relations and identities as well as the circulation of a persisting Whiteness ideology in a global context.

Read or purchase the article here.

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