Building Language Teacher Awareness of Colonial Histories and Imperialistic Oppression Through the Linguistic Landscape

Date

2020

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Nature

Abstract

This chapter considers the potential of the linguistic landscape to address the challenge of developing critical multilingual awareness in a predominantly English monolingual and white settler student body in a Canadian teacher education program. The chapter begins with a historical overview of colonial efforts to suppress multilingualism in the province through education, provides a review of relevant literature, and describes a teacher education linguistic landscape activity in relation to this literature. From there, the chapter provides details and findings from a small study of pre-service teachers. The chapter includes examples of student photo analysis as well as a discussion of the usefulness of “noticing” the textual practices of public spaces in helping student teachers to build their awareness of colonial histories and imperialistic oppression. In this way, the chapter addresses the question of how the linguistic landscape can become a productive site for project-based learning in language teacher education.

Description

This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Springer in 2020 available at: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-55761-4

Keywords

teacher education, Indigenous languages, multilingualism, teacher language awareness, project-based learning

Citation

Sterzuk, A. (2020). Building Language Teacher Awareness of Colonial Histories and Imperialistic Oppression Through the Linguistic Landscape. In: Malinowski, D., Maxim, H.H., Dubreil, S. (eds) Language Teaching in the Linguistic Landscape. Educational Linguistics, vol 49. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-55761-4_7

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