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(Meta)Languaging: Exploring Metaling...
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Jones, Renata Love.
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(Meta)Languaging: Exploring Metalinguistic Engagement Within a Language-based Reading Intervention for Upper Elementary Bi/Multilingual Students.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
(Meta)Languaging: Exploring Metalinguistic Engagement Within a Language-based Reading Intervention for Upper Elementary Bi/Multilingual Students./
Author:
Jones, Renata Love.
Published:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2020,
Description:
369 p.
Notes:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-11, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International81-11A.
Subject:
Education. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=27960306
ISBN:
9798643181477
(Meta)Languaging: Exploring Metalinguistic Engagement Within a Language-based Reading Intervention for Upper Elementary Bi/Multilingual Students.
Jones, Renata Love.
(Meta)Languaging: Exploring Metalinguistic Engagement Within a Language-based Reading Intervention for Upper Elementary Bi/Multilingual Students.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2020 - 369 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-11, Section: A.
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston College, 2020.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
This dissertation develops, theorizes, and investigates the notion of metalinguistic engagement (ME). Within the context of reading research for upper elementary bi/multilingual students, which is relatively sparse and particularly lacking in qualitative detail, there are some emerging and promising findings related to the impacts of ME on students' overall literacy development (Proctor et al,. 2012; Silverman et al., 2014). These outcomes specifically suggest that the development of component language (semantic, morphology, syntax) knowledge, skills, and strategies through ME provides substantial support to bi/multilingual students (Proctor et al., 2015; Silverman et al., 2015). CLAVES, a quasi-experimental language-based reading intervention and curriculum project (Proctor et al., 2020), highlighted the instructional malleability of ME, demonstrating positive effects for both language proficiency and reading comprehension among the participating fourth and fifth grade Spanish/English and Portuguese/English bi/multilingual students. However, the nature of the students' ME and the extent to which their naturally dynamic linguistic repertoires emerged and were capitalized on during learning is currently unknown. In order to address gaps in research, this dissertation theorizes and investigates ME and contributes a qualitative analysis to the larger quasi-experimental intervention from Proctor et al (2020). This dissertation presents three case studies of teachers and their fourth-grade, Spanish/English bi/multilingual student working groups. A theoretical framework of cultural historical activity theory (CHAT) (Greeno & Engstrom, 2014; Roth & Lee, 2007) informed by heteroglossia (Bakhtin, 1981) was employed to attend to the tensions between the centripetal forces of classrooms' goal-oriented activity and the centrifugal aspects of multiple voices and repertoires during ME (Wertsch, 2009). Findings highlight the various actions and resources through which students and teachers participate in ME. The 'multivoicedness' of students' practices were shown to mediate ME goals, while also moving alongside and against the pressures from both the curriculum structure and teachers' facilitation. Furthermore, dialectics between the curriculum and teachers within ME activities emphasize overarching tensions related to the goals of ME and the students' opportunities and outcomes within ME. Findings accentuate the flexibility and constraints on bi/multilingual students' practice and participation during ME and have implications for curriculum, instruction, and teacher preparation.
ISBN: 9798643181477Subjects--Topical Terms:
516579
Education.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Bilingual education
(Meta)Languaging: Exploring Metalinguistic Engagement Within a Language-based Reading Intervention for Upper Elementary Bi/Multilingual Students.
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This dissertation develops, theorizes, and investigates the notion of metalinguistic engagement (ME). Within the context of reading research for upper elementary bi/multilingual students, which is relatively sparse and particularly lacking in qualitative detail, there are some emerging and promising findings related to the impacts of ME on students' overall literacy development (Proctor et al,. 2012; Silverman et al., 2014). These outcomes specifically suggest that the development of component language (semantic, morphology, syntax) knowledge, skills, and strategies through ME provides substantial support to bi/multilingual students (Proctor et al., 2015; Silverman et al., 2015). CLAVES, a quasi-experimental language-based reading intervention and curriculum project (Proctor et al., 2020), highlighted the instructional malleability of ME, demonstrating positive effects for both language proficiency and reading comprehension among the participating fourth and fifth grade Spanish/English and Portuguese/English bi/multilingual students. However, the nature of the students' ME and the extent to which their naturally dynamic linguistic repertoires emerged and were capitalized on during learning is currently unknown. In order to address gaps in research, this dissertation theorizes and investigates ME and contributes a qualitative analysis to the larger quasi-experimental intervention from Proctor et al (2020). This dissertation presents three case studies of teachers and their fourth-grade, Spanish/English bi/multilingual student working groups. A theoretical framework of cultural historical activity theory (CHAT) (Greeno & Engstrom, 2014; Roth & Lee, 2007) informed by heteroglossia (Bakhtin, 1981) was employed to attend to the tensions between the centripetal forces of classrooms' goal-oriented activity and the centrifugal aspects of multiple voices and repertoires during ME (Wertsch, 2009). Findings highlight the various actions and resources through which students and teachers participate in ME. The 'multivoicedness' of students' practices were shown to mediate ME goals, while also moving alongside and against the pressures from both the curriculum structure and teachers' facilitation. Furthermore, dialectics between the curriculum and teachers within ME activities emphasize overarching tensions related to the goals of ME and the students' opportunities and outcomes within ME. Findings accentuate the flexibility and constraints on bi/multilingual students' practice and participation during ME and have implications for curriculum, instruction, and teacher preparation.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=27960306
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