Midlands State University Library
Image from Google Jackets

Multilingualism in the early years : extending the limits of our world / Sandra Smidt.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: London ; Routledge, 2016Description: xi, 149 pages ; 26 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781138942455 (pbk.)
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • LC3715
Contents:
Part 1. 1. My language/languages 2. Being bilingual 3. How language can define you 4. How we acquire our first and subsequent languages. Part 2 5. language/languages in the school curriculum 6. the pedagogical and social reasons for children being able to use their mother tongue or first language in their early learning 7. a brief history of minority education in the UK Part 3 8. Making sense of a new world 9. Understanding multimodality and translanguaging in early education 10. The threat of a good example: Celebrating and supporting young bilingual learners 11. Implications for practitioners Part 4 12. Which children? Whose rights? 13. Performing culture 14. Language and identity 15. Preserving language an culture 16. Pedagogy, politics and poverty
Summary: Multilingualism in the Early Years is a highly accessible text that examines the political, theoretical, ideological and practical issues involved in the education of children speaking two or more languages. Drawing on current research and thinking about the advantages and disadvantages of being multilingual, Smidt uses powerful case studies to reveal how language or languages are acquired. She explores language in terms of who shares it, its relationship to class, culture, power, identity and thinking, and its fascinating role as it moves from the personal to the public and political. More specifically the book studies: what it means to be bilingual through an analysis of the language histories submitted by a range of people; how language/s define people; a brief history of minority education in the UK; how practitioners and teachers can best support all young children as learners whilst they continue to use their first languages and remain part of and partners in their communities and cultures; being bilingual: an advantage or a disadvantage? the impact of multilingualism on children’s educational and life chances. Multilingualism in the Early Years is a really useful text for practitioners working with multilingual children, as well as any student undertaking courses in early childhood education.
Reviews from LibraryThing.com:
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Main Library Open Shelf LC3715 SMI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 149895 Available BK136766

Includes bibliographical references.

Part 1. 1. My language/languages 2. Being bilingual 3. How language can define you 4. How we acquire our first and subsequent languages. Part 2 5. language/languages in the school curriculum 6. the pedagogical and social reasons for children being able to use their mother tongue or first language in their early learning 7. a brief history of minority education in the UK Part 3 8. Making sense of a new world 9. Understanding multimodality and translanguaging in early education 10. The threat of a good example: Celebrating and supporting young bilingual learners 11. Implications for practitioners Part 4 12. Which children? Whose rights? 13. Performing culture 14. Language and identity 15. Preserving language an culture 16. Pedagogy, politics and poverty

Multilingualism in the Early Years is a highly accessible text that examines the political, theoretical, ideological and practical issues involved in the education of children speaking two or more languages. Drawing on current research and thinking about the advantages and disadvantages of being multilingual, Smidt uses powerful case studies to reveal how language or languages are acquired. She explores language in terms of who shares it, its relationship to class, culture, power, identity and thinking, and its fascinating role as it moves from the personal to the public and political. More specifically the book studies:

what it means to be bilingual through an analysis of the language histories submitted by a range of people;
how language/s define people;
a brief history of minority education in the UK;
how practitioners and teachers can best support all young children as learners whilst they continue to use their first languages and remain part of and partners in their communities and cultures;
being bilingual: an advantage or a disadvantage?
the impact of multilingualism on children’s educational and life chances.
Multilingualism in the Early Years is a really useful text for practitioners working with multilingual children, as well as any student undertaking courses in early childhood education.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.