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£34.99

Sociolinguistic and Pedagogical Dimensions of Dialects in Education

Edited By: Andreas Papapavlou, Pavlos Pavlou

£34.99

This volume brings together findings on the disputed role of non-standard dialects in education. It offers insights on policy, classroom use, and bidialectalism to help create an environment that respects the linguistic rights of all speakers.

In bidialectal speech communities it is common practice that standard dialects are strongly favoured in education whereas the role of nonstandard dialects is highly disputed.…
£34.99
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In bidialectal speech communities it is common practice that standard dialects are strongly favoured in education whereas the role of nonstandard dialects is highly disputed. Several countries in Europe have successfully dealt with the use of dialects in education while in other countries such matters have yet to be adequately addressed and successfully resolved. Some educators are still debating as to whether dialects and nonstandard languages should be used in education because, among other concerns, they erroneously question the adequacy of dialects in meeting speakers’ communicative needs. In the same vein, others do not seem to be convinced that conducting education in a dialect is beneficial for all members of a community.
Sociolinguistic and Pedagogical Dimensions of Dialects in Education brings together various theoretical, descriptive and empirical findings on the status of non-standard dialects, their relation and coexistence with standard or official languages and their potential use in education. Gaining insights in such issues is of immense importance to researchers, policy makers, educators, parents and children since it can help in creating an educational environment that would respect the linguistic rights of bidialectal speakers and be a source for their empowerment.
The edited volume contains 12 papers and is organized into four sections. Section I, which consists of three papers, deals with diachronic issues in dialects in education. Two papers in Section II present historical and current issues in language-in-education policy and planning while Section III, containing four papers, examines several aspects of dialect use in the classroom. Finally, the three papers in Section IV discuss the psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic dimensions of bidialectalism.

– Andreas Papapavlou received his PhD from the University of Rochester and is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of Cyprus since 1991. His research interests and publications are in the areas of language contact and lexical borrowing, language attitudes, bilingualism/multilingualism and dialect education.
– Pavlos Pavlou studied at the University of Vienna, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale and Georgetown University. He is Assistant Professor at the University of Cyprus. He works and publishes on language testing, CLIL, teaching young learners, sociolinguistics, multilingual advertising and written code-switching.

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-84718-159-7
  • ISBN13: 978-1-84718-159-6
  • Date of Publication: 2007-07-12

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-0846-6
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-0846-0
  • Date of Publication: 2007-07-12

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: CFB, JN
  • THEMA: CFB, JN
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