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<font size=3>Richard: Yes - you add a crucial dimension to the
discussion - of course eductional linguistics is primarily about
education - otherwise the terms would be reversed - and what counts is
the learning of mathematics, history, or biology. The language that
goes with it consists of symbols to encode the content and is not the
content itself. By way of excuse, all we linguists know about is
linguistics and so of course we tend to give it prominence in any
discussion. <br><br>
Cheers,<br>
Dan <br><br>
At 08:49 AM 12/16/2003, you wrote:<br>
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<br>
While I support much of the preceding points raised by Dick, Bernard
<br>
and Dan, I fear a slightly narrow focus on language per se - a little
<br>
too much 'linguistics', not quite enough 'educational'<br><br>
Dan, for example, suggested that "Helping our learners develop a
rich <br>
repertoire of linguistic choices, appropriate for the many contexts
<br>
they'll find themselves negotiating as they move through the system
and<br>
enter the workplace as adults is what we're about"<br><br>
While I agree that this is part of what educational linguistics might
<br>
work on, I want to add something about how language(s), linguistic <br>
choices etc. are related to learning - not the learning of language,
<br>
but the learning of everything else in the curriculum. <br><br>
I, for example, come from a mathematics education background. My <br>
research is about multilingual mathematics classrooms. Some key <br>
questions include:<br><br>
.How does learning the language of schooling relate with how children
<br>
learn mathematics through that language? <br>
.How do children use language to make sense of mathematics? <br>
.How do teachers use language to make sense of mathematics?<br>
.How can teachers use language to support students to make sense of
<br>
mathematics? <br><br>
Part of learning mathematics is about learning how to talk like a <br>
mathematician, but it is not enough, for me, for us to study how <br>
mathematicians talk, or how to teach children how to talk like a <br>
mathematician - the relationship between the talk and the mathematics
<br>
is crucial, and for me, an important area of work for educational <br>
linguistics. And equally for the other curriculum areas...<br>
<br>
Richard Barwell<br><br>
<br><br>
On Mon, 15 Dec 2003 21:40:18 +0000 Dick Hudson <br>
<dick@linguistics.ucl.ac.uk> wrote:<br><br>
| Dan: Thanks. That's what I hoped you meant. That "rich repertoire
of <br>
| linguistic choices" is the heart of the matter. What we need to
<br>
| understand <br>
| better is (a) what it is and (b) how to teach it. A challenging
agenda,<br>
| but <br>
| I think we're on the way (even if we're still far nearer the beginning
<br>
| of <br>
| the road than its end).<br>
| Dick<br>
| <br>
| At 14:21 15/12/2003 -0600, you wrote:<br>
| >Dick: You raise an important issue, and help clarify the
problem, I <br>
| >think. When I suggest that we need to understand the nature
of <br>
| language <br>
| >use in the educational context, I mean that we need to know more
about<br>
| not <br>
| >only the learners' language use, but what the expectations of the
<br>
| >educational system are as well. What is this "cognitive
academic <br>
| language <br>
| >proficiency" / school language we educational linguists are
interested <br>
| >in? Helping our learners develop a rich repertoire of
linguistic <br>
| choices, <br>
| >appropriate for the many contexts they'll find themselves
negotiating <br>
| as <br>
| >they move through the system and enter the workplace as adults is
what <br>
| >we're about, it seems to me.<br>
| ><br>
| >Cheers,<br>
| >Dan<br>
| ><br>
| >At 07:26 PM 12/15/2003 +0000, you wrote:<br>
| >>Dear Dan,<br>
| >>I'm not sure what you mean by this:<br>
| >>> The bottom line is understanding the nature of
language use in the <br>
| >>> educational context, it seems to me, and, as you suggest,
tests can<br>
| be <br>
| >>> used to encourage teachers to discover the complex
language systems <br>
| >>> pupils already control.<br>
| >><br>
| >>You seem to be assuming that educational language is just a
<br>
| particular <br>
| >>way of using a child's existing language resources. While
agreeing <br>
| that <br>
| >>there has been a tendency for teachers to underestimate these
<br>
| resources, <br>
| >>I also think there's a danger of overestimating them. One of
the <br>
| >>foundations for language work (in L1 English) over here in
England is<br>
| the <br>
| >>(Hallidayan) belief that those resources need to grow - schools
teach<br>
| new <br>
| >>language, in fact a very great deal of it. New vocabulary, new
syntax<br>
| and <br>
| >>new meanings that the children wouldn't have without schooling.
Maybe<br>
| you <br>
| >>wouldn't agree, but if you do, would that be covered by your
<br>
| "language use"?<br>
| >><br>
| >>Dick<br>
| >><br>
| >>Richard (= Dick) Hudson<br>
| >><br>
| >>Phonetics and Linguistics, University College London,<br>
| >>Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT.<br>
| >>+44(0)20 7679 3152; fax +44(0)20 7383 4108; <br>
|
>><a href="http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/dick/home.htm" eudora="autourl">http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/dick/home.htm</a><br>
| >Professor, TESL/Applied Linguistics Program<br>
| >Co-editor, Language Testing<br>
| >English Department<br>
| >Iowa State University<br>
| >Ames, IA 50011, USA<br>
| >Phone: (515) 294-9365<br>
| >Fax: (515) 294-6814<br>
| <br>
| <br>
| Richard (= Dick) Hudson<br>
| <br>
| Phonetics and Linguistics, University College London,<br>
| Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT.<br>
| +44(0)20 7679 3152; fax +44(0)20 7383 4108; <br>
|
<a href="http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/dick/home.htm" eudora="autourl">http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/dick/home.htm</a>
<br><br>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br>
Richard Barwell<br>
Graduate School of Education<br>
University of Bristol<br>
35 Berkeley Square<br>
Bristol, BS8 1JA, UK<br>
+44 (0)117 33 14276</blockquote>
<x-sigsep><p></x-sigsep>
Professor, TESL/Applied Linguistics Program<br>
Co-editor, <i>Language Testing<br>
</i>English Department<br>
Iowa State University<br>
Ames, IA 50011, USA<br>
Phone: (515) 294-9365<br>
Fax: (515) 294-6814<br>
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