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McKinney, Emry; Hoggan, Chad – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2022
For educators committed to promoting social equity, the question of how to address dialect hegemony is increasingly important. While linguists have long accepted the concept of dialect equality, educators have struggled with the issue, sparking a history of controversy and debate underscoring larger social issues of diversity and equity. For…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Nonstandard Dialects, Standard Spoken Usage, Teaching Methods
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Puranik, Cynthia; Branum-Martin, Lee; Washington, Julie A. – Child Development, 2020
The purpose of this longitudinal study was to examine the influence of spoken dialect density on writing and on the codevelopment of reading and writing in African American English-speaking (AAE) children from first through fifth grades. The sample included 869 students, ranging in age from 5.8 to 12.5 years. Results indicated that dialect density…
Descriptors: African American Students, Elementary School Students, Black Dialects, Writing (Composition)
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Mahurin-Smith, Jamie; Mills, Monique T.; Chang, Rong – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2021
Purpose: This study was designed to assess the utility of a tool for automated analysis of rare vocabulary use in the spoken narratives of a group of school-age children from low-income communities. Method: We evaluated personal and fictional narratives from 76 school-age children from low-income communities (M[subscript age] = 9;3…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Elementary School Students, Low Income Students, Oral Language
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Young, Vershawn Ashanti – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 2020
This article analyzes several online performances from the Black Lives Matter movement for the ways they utilize and blend standard academic literacies and African American rhetoric. These performances are discussed as pedagogies of possibility that meet and exceed the common core standards. This talk also points up the crucial roles that racial…
Descriptors: African Americans, Social Justice, Literacy, Code Switching (Language)
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MacSwan, Jeff – Language Teaching Research, 2020
The author situates language education policy and scholarship on Academic English within the broader historical context of standard language ideology, the view that the language variety of socio-economic elites is intrinsically more complex than other varieties. It is argued that the current predominant focus on the nature of school language gives…
Descriptors: Language Variation, Language Attitudes, Socioeconomic Status, Standard Spoken Usage
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Tessa Brown – College Composition and Communication, 2020
In this article, the author uses storytelling to retell moments in the history of our field. Using personal anecdote alongside critical race theory and critical whiteness studies, she critiques the Writing About Writing movement by re-situating it in history: first narrating it as a contemporary of the Translingualism movement, and then comparing…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Educational History, Writing Instruction, Writing Skills
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Holt, Yolanda Feimster – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2018
Purpose: This research explored mechanisms of vowel variation in African American English by comparing 2 geographically distant groups of African American and White American English speakers for participation in the African American Shift and the Southern Vowel Shift. Method: Thirty-two male (African American: n = 16, White American controls: n =…
Descriptors: African Americans, Black Dialects, Vowels, Comparative Analysis
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McDonald, Janet L.; Oetting, Janna B. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2019
Purpose: Nonword repetition (NWR) has been proposed as a culturally and linguistically fair measure of children's language abilities that is useful for the identification of specific language impairment (SLI). However, Moyle, Heilmann, and Finneran (2014) suggested that the density of a child's nonmainstream forms also influences NWR in ways that…
Descriptors: Language Skills, Identification, Language Impairments, Black Dialects
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Cushing, Ian – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2023
Education policy in England's schools is driven by the 'what works' agenda, characterised by interventions claiming to be scientifically objective and evidence-led. In this article I show how what works interventions reproduce anti-Black linguistic racism because to be perceived as someone who is 'working', racialised children must assimilate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Low Income Students, Blacks, Racial Composition
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Alston, Christina; Mirghassemi, Fatemeh; Gist, Conra D. – Multicultural Perspectives, 2022
Scholarly writing is traditionally written and reviewed with a positivist mindset, based on ideas of universal truths that typically remove subjectivisms, cultural experiences, and marginalized voices from the writing process. Writing in this manner fails to recognize how the societal and internalized ideas of white dominance can negatively…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Writing Instruction, Writing Processes, Minority Groups
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Dewi, Ida Kusuma; Nababan, M. R.; Santosa, Riyadi; Djatmika – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2018
This study looks at how African-American (AA) dialects in Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" novel should be translated into the Indonesian language. For the data, sayings by AA characters featuring the African-American English (AAE) phonological dialect were selected. An emphasis was placed on how Twain makes use of…
Descriptors: United States Literature, Black Dialects, African Americans, Translation
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Ladva, Nimisha – Communication Center Journal, 2020
Given the continuing harm that racism produces in the U.S. and the world, as well as the increased interest in anti-racist work, this paper asks: Is the work of the communication center racist? In the absence of an anti-racist praxis in every hire, in every tutoring session, in every workshop, in every training, the short answer is…
Descriptors: Academic Support Services, Communication (Thought Transfer), Communication Skills, Racial Discrimination
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Westbrooks, Lisa Marie – Journal for Multicultural Education, 2020
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to share my personal memories and emotions of my experience as an African American, a Woman of Color, teacher-peer, teacher-researcher, student and a colonized standard American English speaker, situated in English classrooms as white teachers teach African American literature from a white gaze. I concur with…
Descriptors: White Teachers, African American Literature, English Instruction, Multicultural Education
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Berry, Jessica R.; Oetting, Janna B. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2017
Purpose: We compared copula and auxiliary verb BE use by African American English-speaking children with and without a creole heritage, using Gullah/Geechee as the creole criterion, to determine if differences exist, the nature of the differences, and the impact of the differences on interpretations of ability. Method: Data came from 38 children,…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Verbs, African American Students, Preschool Children
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Baldwin, Erika; Heilmann, John; Finneran, Denise; Cho, Chi C.; Moyle, Maura – Journal of Research in Reading, 2022
Background: Numerous studies have observed a significant and unique relationship between children's use of nonmainstream dialect and reading outcomes. We aimed to examine the relationship between nonmainstream dialect and reading at its roots by completing a preliminary evaluation of the relationship between African American English (AAE) dialect…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, African American Students, Structural Equation Models, Reading Skills
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