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Focusing on how to address persistent linguistically structured inequalities, this book lays bare the tension between the commitment to multilingualism and language-in-education policy - particularly in South Africa - and the realities of the dominance of English and the virtual absence of indigenous African languages in educational practices. It suggests that dynamic plurilingual pedagogies can be allied with the explicit scaffolding of genre-based pedagogies to redress the asymmetry in epistemic access and to re-imagine policy, pedagogy and practice more in tune with the realities of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Focusing on how to address persistent linguistically structured inequalities, this book lays bare the tension between the commitment to multilingualism and language-in-education policy - particularly in South Africa - and the realities of the dominance of English and the virtual absence of indigenous African languages in educational practices. It suggests that dynamic plurilingual pedagogies can be allied with the explicit scaffolding of genre-based pedagogies to redress the asymmetry in epistemic access and to re-imagine policy, pedagogy and practice more in tune with the realities of multilingual classrooms. This book was originally published as a special issue of Language and Education.


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Autorenporträt
Caroline Kerfoot is Associate Professor in the Centre for Research on Bilingualism at Stockholm University, Sweden. She was formerly Head of Language Education at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. Her current research focuses on multilingualism, identities, and epistemic access in educational sites characterised by high levels of diversity and flux. She is co-editor (with Kenneth Hyltenstam) of Entangled Discourses: South-North Orders of Visibility, forthcoming in Routledge Critical Studies in Multilingualism. Anne-Marie Simon-Vandenbergen is Emeritus Professor of English Linguistics at Ghent University, Belgium, where she is currently an associated researcher. She has published on various aspects of English and contrastive grammar, especially modality and pragmatic markers, from a functional linguistic point of view, and she was an editor of the journal Functions of Language for 20 years. Her most recent interest is in multilingual education, especially in the South African context, and in issues arising from linguistic diversity in Flemish education as a result of immigration.