Midwestern In‐service Teachers' Raciolinguistic Mindset and Pedagogies for Emergent Bilingual Learners: Whose Equity and Excellence Are We Seeking For?

Author:

Song Kim H.1ORCID,Schultz Lyndsie Marie2ORCID,Child Gregory3ORCID,Kim Sujin4ORCID,Dorner Lisa5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Educator Preparation and Leadership University of Missouri‐St. Louis St. Louis Missouri United States

2. Department of Education Washington University St. Louis Missouri United States

3. Department of Education Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan United States

4. Culturally and Linguistically Diverse and Exceptional Learners Program George Mason University Fairfax Virginia United States

5. Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis University of Missouri‐Columbia Columbia Missouri United States

Abstract

AbstractThis mixed methods study examined how a National Professional Development Grant project's first cohort (2018–2020) in the Midwest impacted mostly White and monolingual inservice teachers who work with emergent bilingual learners (EBLs). Two research questions (RQs) guided this study: RQ1: What were the inservice teachers English language ideologies and their confidence in teaching EBLs after they completed professional development on racially, linguistically, and culturally (RLC) responsive teaching mindsets and pedagogies? and RQ2: How did the inservice teachers respond to prompts about raciolinguistic ideologies and EBLs' use of Standard American English? Quantitative t‐tests and factor analyses on pre‐post teacher surveys were conducted to investigate RQ1. Qualitative open and axial analyses on teachers' reflections to prompts about language ideologies were completed for RQ2. Quantitative results revealed that a majority of the participating teachers reported improved confidence in developing RLC responsive teaching strategies for EBLs. At the same time, their reflections showed that they persisted in their deeply‐rooted raciolinguistic ideologies about English, even though they intended to acknowledge and appreciate EBLs' use of language varieties.

Funder

Office of English Language Acquisition

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Education

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