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Vinogradov, Igor – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2021
Languages in the Mesoamerican linguistic area have been reported to lack a dedicated means of expressing the privative meaning that encodes the absence of a participant in a situation. This micro-typological study identifies alternative strategies that the languages in this area employ to function without dedicated privative markers, namely…
Descriptors: Language Classification, American Indian Languages, Spanish, Linguistic Borrowing
Cychosz, Margaret; Villanueva, Anele; Weisleder, Adriana – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2021
Purpose: The language that children hear early in life is associated with their speech-language outcomes. This line of research relies on naturalistic observations of children's language input, often captured with daylong audio recordings. However, the large quantity of data that daylong recordings generate requires novel analytical tools to…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Linguistic Input, Native Language, Second Language Learning
Stephanie L. Canizales; Brendan H. O’Connor – Educational Linguistics, 2021
Scholars acknowledge that Indigenous Latinx immigrants' complex process of adapting to life in the United States, or incorporation, differs from that of their non-Indigenous counterparts. Understanding these differences is especially important as arrivals of Indigenous refugees and asylum seekers from Central America have increased steadily over…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Hispanic American Students, Immigrants, American Indian Students
Pentón Herrera, Luis Javier – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2021
The growing presence of the Indigenous diaspora from Latin America is beginning to transform notions of Latinidad and Indigeneity in the United States. Yet, scant studies have focused on the experiences of Indigenous Latinx students in U.S. learning environments and on what is needed to ensure their academic success. In this article, I share the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Resilience (Psychology), Hispanic American Students, Academic Achievement
Coronel-Molina, Serafín M.; Cowan, Peter M. – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2017
Recent studies have examined Indigenous and mestizo communities that engage in social practices of transculturated, Amerindian and translingual literacies, often to resist efforts by powerful groups to oppress them. By drawing on data from studies conducted in Peru and the United States, we trace the trajectories of Amerindian and translingual…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Literacy, Postmodernism, Foreign Policy
Ruitenberg, Claudia W.; Knowlton, Autumn; Li, Gang – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2016
The paper highlights the role of translation in qualitative research that involves multiple languages. Its particular focus is on untranslatables, that is, those words or phrases in a source language that pose challenges to translators because no direct equivalent is available in the target language. "Untranslatables" create moments of…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Mandarin Chinese, Citizen Participation, Role
Holder, Adela Berry – ProQuest LLC, 2017
This research is a study of the relationship between language acquisition and the status of equity. The history of the Maya people in Guatemala gives strong evidence that their failure to acquire competence in Spanish, which is the national language of their nation, has resulted in their failure to compete in the social, economic, and political…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Languages, Correlation, Social Status
Kleyn, Tatyana – Multicultural Perspectives, 2017
Undocumented families' rates of repatriation to Mexico from the United States have risen throughout the Obama administration, and this trend will likely increase under Donald Trump. This study describes the experiences of Mexican-born youth who grew up in the United States and are back in Mexico. While these children are participants in their…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Geographic Regions, Undocumented Immigrants, Spanish
King, Kendall A.; Hermes, Mary – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2014
This paper describes 3 language learning approaches common in many urban and rural Ojibwe communities, as well as the ideologies of endangerment that drive and sustain them. Drawing from collaborative language revitalization work with teachers, learners, and community leaders, we analyze some of the teaching and learning practices that lead to the…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Language Maintenance, Teaching Methods, Language Attitudes
Sumida Huaman, Elizabeth – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2014
This article discusses emerging research on youth and Indigenous languages. Based on a comparative and international Indigenous education study in Peru and the United States, the intersection between Indigenous community spaces, schools, and languages is examined. Given global trends of Indigenous language loss, comparative research provides the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, American Indians, American Indian Languages
McCarty, Teresa L.; Nicholas, Sheilah E. – Review of Research in Education, 2014
In this chapter, the authors offer a critical examination of a growing field of educational inquiry and social practice: the reclamation of Indigenous mother tongues. They use the term "reclamation" purposefully to denote that these are languages that have been forcibly subordinated in contexts of colonization. Language reclamation…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Educational Research, Native Language, Language Maintenance
More Like Jazz than Classical: Reciprocal Interactions among Educational Researchers and Respondents
Dance, L. Janelle; Gutierrez, Rochelle; Hermes, Mary – Harvard Educational Review, 2010
In this article, educational scholars L. Janelle Dance, Rochelle Gutierrez, and Mary Hermes share insights from their lived experience as qualitative researchers trying to work in collaboration with diverse populations. They refer to these insights as "improvisations on conventional qualitative methods," reminding readers that their…
Descriptors: Classical Music, Music, Educational Researchers, Interpersonal Relationship
Indigenous Language Education Policy: Supporting Community-Controlled Immersion in Canada and the US
De Korne, Haley – Language Policy, 2010
The vitality of most Indigenous languages in North America, like minority languages in many parts of the world, is at risk due to the pressures of majority languages and cultures. The transmission of Indigenous languages through school-based programs is a wide-spread approach to maintaining and revitalizing threatened languages in Canada and the…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Public Schools, Bilingual Education, Community Control
Glenn, Charles L. – Palgrave Macmillan, 2011
Tracing the history of Native American schooling in North America, this book emphasizes factors in society at large--and sometimes within indigenous communities--which led to Native American children being separate from the white majority. Charles Glenn examines the evolving assumptions about race and culture as applied to schooling, the reactions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Maintenance, American Indians, Educational History
Ashburn, Elyse – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Of the 300 or so native languages once spoken in North America, only about 150 are still spoken--and the majority of those have just a handful of mostly elderly speakers. For most Native American languages, colleges and universities are their last great hope, if not their final resting place. People at a number of institutions across the country…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indian Languages, Language Maintenance, Cultural Maintenance