[Edling] IJME - Special Issue Call for Papers - Bi/Multilingual Teacher Education
Alyson Lavigne via Edling
edling at lists.mail.umbc.edu
Thu Feb 1 15:34:10 UTC 2024
I’m sharing a recent call for papers for the International Journal of Multicultural Education – see below!
Best,
Alyson
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Special Issue Call for Papers
Exploring the “4-Trans” in Bi/Multilingual Teacher Education: Transnationalism, Transculturalism, Translanguaging, and Transdisciplinarity
In today’s world, there are instances of simultaneity and heterogeneity in how we identify ourselves and our world, and how we engage with that complex, multilingual world. The explorations and conceptualization of translanguaging (Andrei et al., 2020; Li Wei, 2018), transnationalism (Kasun & Mora-Pablo, 2022), transculturalism (Loh, 2022), and transdisciplinarity (Gibbs, 2017) have contributed to understanding the multidimensionality and complexity of individuals and communities beyond national boundaries. Political, social, historical, and economic forces are delivering a world that calls for an exploration and understanding from a “trans” perspective that emphasizes intersectionality and integration without separation, bringing to the forefront the multidimensionality and flexibility of social processes (Donahue, 2016). Inspired by the “4-trans,” the present call for articles is anchored on current academic discussions that confront monolithic conceptions of bilingual/multilingual teacher education.
In response to the culturally and linguistically diverse contexts of today’s classrooms, this special issue aims to contribute to current discussions on bilingual/multilingual teacher education frameworks and practices as explained, questioned, challenged, or proposed through one or more, as well as the intersection, of the “4 trans” lenses identified above. Moreover, we seek manuscripts that challenge rigid approaches to bilingual/multilingual teacher education and share perspectives and/or explorations that transcend monoglossic, monocultural, monodisciplinar, and fixed notions of national identity in the development of bilingual/multilingual educators. In this way, we encourage submissions that address the complexities of bilingual and multilingual teacher education in any of the following areas:
* Ways in which a multidimensional perspective could inform teacher preparation as it applies to transnationalism, transculturalism, translanguaging, and/or transdisciplinarity in different sociohistorical and cultural contexts.
* Theoretical approaches to transcultural, transnational, translingual, and/or transdisciplinary research and practice in bi/multilingual teacher preparation and teacher development.
* Disruptive approaches to multilingual teacher education which focus on any of the intersections of the 4-trans. Specifically, we invite submissions that go beyond superficial discourses of inclusion that challenge current mainstream discourses in multilingual education.
* Examinations of practices and approaches regarding multilingual teacher preparation that draw from the “4 trans” in relation to education content, modalities, rural/urban contexts, and/or socioeconomical factors, etc.
* Empirical studies that are informed by the intersection of translanguaging, transnationalism, transculturality, and/or transdisciplinarity.
Guided by the above description, the International Journal of Multicultural Education (IJME) welcomes scholars to read the guidelines stated below and submit manuscripts that offer research findings based on original studies employing predominantly qualitative methodologies; innovative qualitative methodologies; pedagogical reflections; literature reviews; and theoretical pieces utilizing and/or examining the “4 trans” described above.
IJME Submission Guidelines
1. Register first with the IJME (ijme-journal.org) if you are not a registered user. Please ensure that you have checked the “author” option in your profile.
2. Follow the IJME submission guidelines (https://ijme-journal.org/index.php/ijme/about/submissions) available from the website. Use the article template when preparing your manuscript (https://tinyurl.com/IJME-Template). Manuscripts not following the submission guidelines will not be reviewed.
3. Submit your manuscript directly to the website. In addition, submit the author ethical checklist (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1oikNpwfyy9TK7VqeLJIBb3PM23EGBeQ7/edit) as a separate supplementary document and complete the metadata of your manuscript, as instructed in the journal’s submission webpage, by July 30, 2024.
IJME Selection Process of Manuscripts
1. Manuscripts will be judged on their strength and relevance to the theme of the special issue and should be aligned with the multicultural education mission of IJME.
2. Manuscripts should not have been previously published in another journal, nor under consideration by another journal at the time of submission.
3. Each manuscript will be prescreened by special issue editors for its general fitness to the special issue. Next, prescreened manuscripts will be subjected to a double-blind review by a panel of reviewers with expertise in the area. Those manuscripts recommended by the panel of experts will then be considered for final acceptance.
Recommended Timeline
* July 30, 2024: Manuscript Submission Deadline.
* October 30, 2024: Revision Request Decision by Special Issue Editors
* November 30, 2024: Author Revision Deadline
* December 30, 2024: Final Acceptance Decision
* April 2025: Publication of the Special Issue (depending on IJME’s publication dates).
A Brief Introduction to IJME
The International Journal of Multicultural Education (IJME) is a free, peer-reviewed open-access journal for scholars, practitioners, and students of multicultural education. Committed to promoting educational equity for diverse students, cross-cultural understanding, and global justice for marginalized people in all levels of education, including leadership and policies, IJME publishes three types of articles: (1) qualitative research studies that explicitly address multicultural educational issues; (2) conceptual and theoretical articles, typically grounded on in-depth literature review, which advance theories and scholarship of multicultural education; and (3) praxis articles that discuss successful multicultural education practices grounded on sound theories and literature. We encourage submissions resulting from meaningful and ethical collaboration among international scholars and practitioners. Submissions that advance from prescreening will be subject to originality-testing and double-blind peer review. For further details, please visit the journal website at www.ijme-journal.org<http://www.ijme-journal.org>.
For questions, please contact the Guest Editors:
* Sandra I Musanti, musanti at utrgv.edu<mailto:Sandra.musanti at utrgv.edu>
* David Martínez Prieto, martinezprieto at utrgv.edu<mailto:David.martinezprieto at utrgv.edu>
* Xiaodi Zhou, zhou at utrgv.edu<mailto:Xiaodi.zhou at utrgv.edu>
References
Andrei, E; Kibler, A. K; & Salerno, A. (2020) ‘No, Professor, That Is Not True’: First Attempts at Introducing Translanguaging to Pre–service Teachers. In Z. Tian, L. Aghai, P. Sayer, & J. L. Schissel, (Eds.) Envisioning TESOL through a translanguaging lens: Global perspectives (pp. 93–109). Springer International Publishing
Donahue, C. (2016). The “Trans” in Transnational-Translingual: Rhetorical and Linguistic Flexibility as New Norms. Composition Studies, 44(1), 147–150.
Glick Schiller, N., Basch, L. & Blanc-Szanton, C. (1992). Transnationalism: A new analytic framework for understanding migration. In Nina Glick Schiller, Linda Basch, and Cristina Blanc-Szanton (eds.), Towards a Transnational Perspective on Migration, pp. 1-24. New York: The New York Academy of Sciences.
Gibbs, P. (2017). Transdisciplinary higher education: A theoretical basis revealed in practice. Springer.
Kasun, S., & Mora-Pablo, I. (2022). Applying Anzalduan frameworks to understand transnational youth identities: Bridging culture, language, and schooling at the US-Mexican border. Routledge.
Loh, S.H. (2022). The continued relevance of multiculturalism: Dissecting interculturalism and transculturalism. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 45(3), 385-406.
Wei, L. (2018). Translanguaging as a practical theory of language. Applied linguistics, 39(1), 9-30.
Zúñiga, C. E., Ostorga, A., & Hinton, K. A. (2023). (Re)constructing a Border Pedagogy: Centering the Borderlands in Latinx Teacher Education. Journal of Latinos and Education, (ahead-of-print). pp. 1–9.
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Alyson L. Lavigne, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Instructional Leadership
School of Teacher Education and Leadership
College of Education and Human Services
Utah State University
2800 Old Main Hill
Logan, UT 84322-2800
office: (435) 797-4144
email: alyson.lavigne at usu.edu<mailto:alyson.lavigne at usu.edu>
Preferred Pronouns: She/her/hers
Find me @ ResearchGate<https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Alyson_Lavigne>, Google Scholar<https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=F9M2KjQAAAAJ&hl=en>, USU<https://teal.usu.edu/directory/lavigne-alyson>, Digital Commons<https://works.bepress.com/alyson-lavigne/>
Twitter: @LavigneAlyson<https://twitter.com/LavigneAlyson>
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Recent Publications:
JUST PUBLISHED! Lavigne, A. L., & Derrington, M. L. (Eds.)(2023). Actionable feedback to PK-12 teachers.<https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781475866209/Actionable-Feedback-to-PK-12-Teachers> Rowman & Littlefield.
Leu Bonanno, S., Walls, J., Lavigne, A. L., & Washburn, K. (2022). Exploring the intersections of cultural sustenance and care: Toward a vision of culturally and linguistically sustaining school leadership.<https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/10526846221133985?icid=int.sj-abstract.citing-articles.23> Journal of School Leadership.
Lavigne, A. L., Henrichs, L., Acosta Feliz, J. A., & Shao, S. (2021). Cultural responsivity and common conceptions of “good” teaching in culturally and linguistically diverse elementary classrooms in the U.S. and the Netherlands.<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0742051X2200186X?via%3Dihub> Teaching and Teacher Education, 118.
Lavigne, A. L., & Good, T. L. (2021). Using dyadic observation to explore equitable learning opportunities in classroom instruction<https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/epaa/article/view/6954>. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 29.
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