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No Child Left Behind Act 20016
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Alina Arseniev-Koehler – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
Measuring meaning is a central problem in cultural sociology and word embeddings may offer powerful new tools to do so. But like any tool, they build on and exert theoretical assumptions. In this paper, I theorize the ways in which word embeddings model three core premises of a structural linguistic theory of meaning: that meaning is coherent,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Sociology, Language Usage, Structural Linguistics
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Papia Sengupta – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2024
This paper aims at identifying and explaining the correlation between the Covid-19 and multi-lingualism through cross-country research, drawing on three datasets: WHO data on the expanse of the pandemic, UNESCO data on endangered languages, and the LDI (Linguistic Diversity Index). Results establishing a direct correlation between the pandemic and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Multilingualism, COVID-19, Diversity
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Qian Du; Jerry Won Lee – AILA Review, 2024
In an era where migration across borders is increasingly the norm, how are our understandings of language and the ways we talk about language being reimagined along the way? This article examines this question by attending to the shifting metadiscourses of "Chinglish," a colloquialism referring to Chinese-English hybridizations.…
Descriptors: Migration, Chinese, English, Sociolinguistics
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Suresh Canagarajah – AILA Review, 2024
Forms of immobility both limit unqualified human agency and enable diverse channels of mobility. In this sense, mobility and immobility work together. Certain philosophical movements such as Southern theories and disability studies treat constraints, sedentariness, and boundaries as needing to be respected and accommodated in any inquiry. This…
Descriptors: Mobility, Language Usage, Translation, Code Switching (Language)
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Carla L. Hudson Kam – Language Learning and Development, 2024
Based on findings from a variety of research, Shin and Miller (2022) propose a 4-step process that children go through as they learn sociolinguistic variation. Their proposal raises many interesting questions that should inspire future research. Here, I discuss their Step 1 -- the stage in which, according to their proposal, children produce only…
Descriptors: Language Research, Language Acquisition, Language Variation, Child Language
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Hao Tran; Annita Stell – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2024
Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) has been offering unprecedented opportunities for language education. However, its capacity to embrace linguistic diversity, particularly for learners of dialect-rich languages like Vietnamese and Mandarin, remains underexamined. Without careful consideration, GenAI risks reinforcing language hegemonies,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Land Settlement, Vietnamese, Dialects
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Chonglong Gu – Language Policy, 2025
Partly as a result of China's reform and opening-up and the broader trend of globalisation, Guangzhou in Southern China has risen to global prominence as a commercial and business hub. Strategically positioned as a centre of 'low-end globalisation', Guangzhou has attracted investors, traders and businessmen from Africa, the Middle East and South…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Planning, Sociolinguistics, Contrastive Linguistics
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Li, Aini; Roberts, Gareth – Cognitive Science, 2023
We investigated the emergence of sociolinguistic indexicality using an artificial-language-learning paradigm. Sociolinguistic indexicality involves the association of linguistic variants with nonlinguistic social or contextual features. Any linguistic variant can acquire "constellations" of such indexical meanings, though they also…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Sociolinguistics, Context Effect, Stereotypes
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Morad Alsahafi – Australian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2025
This article reports a part of a larger study which examines the sociolinguistic dynamics within the Hausa community in Saudi Arabia. It focuses on how second-generation members of the Hausa Saudi community perceive their ethnic identity and investigates the relationship between their proficiency in the Hausa heritage language and their sense of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sociolinguistics, Ethnicity, Native Language
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Stef Slembrouck – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
This paper addresses the necessary complementarity between a translanguaging and named language-perspective by critically examining risks of 'overshooting' when a translanguaging view is theoretically posited as the ultimately superior (sociolinguistic) theory of language use and learning in today's multilingual world.
Descriptors: Translation, Sociolinguistics, Classification, Multilingualism
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Ben Rampton; Melanie Cooke; Dermot Bryers; Becky Winstanley; Constant Leung; Anthony Tomei; Sam Holmes – Language Teaching, 2024
What's the relevance of 'Linguistic Citizenship' (LC), a concept developed in southern Africa, to language education in England? LC is committed to democratic participation and voice, to linguistic diversity and the value of sociolinguistic understanding (Stroud 2001), and it provides a framework for contesting linguistic conditions in England,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Minorities, Citizenship, Sociolinguistics
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Lane, Pia – Applied Linguistics, 2023
Language revitalization is imbued with tensions, and while it often is emancipatory, reclaiming a language can be a painful, silencing experience. Processes of colonization have led to epistemological absences (Santos 2012), which may be conceptualized as manifestations of silence. Understanding how and why silences come about and linger today is…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Colonialism, Decolonization, Epistemology
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Sviatlana Karpava – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2024
The topic of linguistic landscapes (LLs) is very important in the area of sociolinguistics of multilingual societies. A linguistic landscape reflects the underlying ideologies regarding languages and their speakers, linguistic diversity, language statuses and perceived values. This study investigated multilingual LL of Cyprus under the conceptual…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Foreign Countries, Semiotics, Language Attitudes
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Stephanie Dryden; Sender Dovchin – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
Using Linguistic Ethnography (LE), we analyse the ways in which English as an additional language (LX) users from migrant backgrounds in Australia encounter overt and covert 'accentism' from the dominant English-speaking Australian society. These forms of accentism may be used to discriminate against LX users' pronunciation and accent in a bid to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Language Learners, Pronunciation, Dialects
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Beatriz Carbajal-Carrera – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2024
The growing implementation of Generative AI (GenAI) in education has implications on the representation of knowledge and identity across languages. In a context where content biases have been reported in AI-generated content, it becomes relevant to interrogate the ways in which AI technologies represent different linguistic identities. This…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Sociolinguistics, Language Usage, Bias
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