Response to inquiry: Heritage communities on a state-by-state basis

smcginnis at nflc.org smcginnis at nflc.org
Thu Dec 5 21:03:16 UTC 2002


From: Wayne Wright Wayne.Wright at asu.edu
Date: Thu, 05 Dec 2002 13:34:02 -0700
Dave,

Try http://www.ncela.gwu.edu/

They have up to date info on LEP students by language. Perhaps this can be
an indicator for the larger language communities?

-Wayne

Wayne E. Wright
Senior Researcher
Language Policy Research Unit
Education Policy Studies Laboratory
Arizona State University



-----Original Message-----
From: Scott McGinnis [mailto:sm167 at umail.umd.edu]
Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2002 1:13 PM
To: heritage-list at Glue.umd.edu
Subject: Inquiry: Heritage communities on a state-by-state basis


Responses may be posted to this list or sent directly to the inquiry
originator, David Goldberg, at DGoldberg at mla.org -- this is a follow-up
question to David's original posting of 4 December.


Do you know who teaches an overview of languages in US that might
direct me to resources? A map is not the main thing, though it would have
been nice. What we need is a source of information about language
communities such as offered by the census from 1990 (not yet available for
2000 census) that spells out by state (by city would be better) where the
various language communities in the US are (e.g., East Lansing: Arabic;
Brooklyn: Yiddish; Lafayette, LA: Cajun; etc, etc.) Do you have any idea
who works in this area?

Thanks for your consideration,
David



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