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Session Type: Symposium
In this symposium, we consider how children and youth in two-way bilingual education (TWBE) programs negotiate bi/multilingual identities and make sense of complex power dynamics within and outside of the classroom. Amidst the existing scholarship on TWBE, little attention has been paid to student perspectives and experiences, despite the well-documented relationship between students identities and investment in language learning (Cummins, 2014; Norton, 2013). In this symposium, we seek to address this gap by (1) presenting empirical findings from six different TWBE contexts that illuminate how K-12 students are experiencing and making sense of learning in two-way bilingual classrooms and (2) fostering critical yet hopeful dialogue around the intersection of TWBE students’ social identities and language learning experiences.
Martín and the Pink Crayon: The Organization of Children's Talk in a Two-Way Immersion Classroom - Sofia Chaparro, University of Colorado - Denver
The Power of "Social Bilinguals" and "Street Talk": Student Perspectives in a Two-Way Immersion Classroom - Suzanne García-Mateus, California State University - Monterey Bay
Becoming Bilingual in Two-Way Immersion: Patterns of Investment in a Second-Grade Classroom - Laura Hamman-Ortiz, University of Northern Colorado
Secondary Students' Experiences in a Two-Way Immersion Program: Attitudes, Belonging, and Translanguaging Practices - Ester J. de Jong, University of Florida; Zach Coulter, University of Florida; Min-Chuan Tsai, University of Florida
"I'll Be the Hero": How Adolescents Negotiate Intersectional Identities Within a High School Dual-Language Program - Amanda Kibler, Oregon State University; April Simun Salerno, University of Virginia; Christine Hardigree, Iona College
Ongoing Emergence: Borderland High School Dual-Language Bilingual Education Students' Self-Identifications as Lingual People - Katherine Mortimer, The University of Texas - El Paso