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7 Hebrew Dual Language Bilingual Education: The Intersection of Race, Language and Religion
-
Sharon Avni
and Kate Menken
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Contributors vii
- Bilingualism for All or Just for the Rich and White? Introducing a Raciolinguistic Perspective to Dual Language Education 1
- 1 The Intersectionality of Neoliberal Classing with Raciolinguistic Marginalization in State Dual Language Policy: A Call for Locally Crafted Programs 19
- 2 Common Threads: Language Policy, Nation, Whiteness, and Privilege in Iowa’s First Dual Language Program 40
- 3 Dual Language and the Erasure of Emergent Bilinguals Labeled As Disabled (EBLADs) 63
- 4 Dueling Discourses in Dual Language Schools: Multilingual ‘Success for All’ versus the Academic ‘Decline’ of Black Students 88
- 5 Centering Raciolinguistic Ideologies in Two-Way Dual Language Education: The Politicized Role of Parents in Mediating their Children’s Bilingualism 111
- 6 Helping or Being Helped? The Influence of Raciolinguistic Ideologies on Parental Involvement in Dual Immersion 132
- 7 Hebrew Dual Language Bilingual Education: The Intersection of Race, Language and Religion 156
- 8 Raciolinguistic Positioning of Language Models in a Korean–English Dual Language Immersion Classroom 177
- 9 The Black and Brown Search for Agency: African American and Latinx Children’s Plight to Bilingualism in a Two-Way Dual Language Program 199
- 10 Who Gets to Count as Emerging Bilinguals? Adapting a Holistic Writing Rubric for All 220
- 11 One White Student’s Journey Through Six Years of Elementary Schooling: Uncovering Whiteness and Privilege in Two-Way Bilingual Education 244
- Conclusion: Bilingualism for All? Revisiting the Question 266
- Afterword: What is the Magic Sauce? 271
- Index 279
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Contributors vii
- Bilingualism for All or Just for the Rich and White? Introducing a Raciolinguistic Perspective to Dual Language Education 1
- 1 The Intersectionality of Neoliberal Classing with Raciolinguistic Marginalization in State Dual Language Policy: A Call for Locally Crafted Programs 19
- 2 Common Threads: Language Policy, Nation, Whiteness, and Privilege in Iowa’s First Dual Language Program 40
- 3 Dual Language and the Erasure of Emergent Bilinguals Labeled As Disabled (EBLADs) 63
- 4 Dueling Discourses in Dual Language Schools: Multilingual ‘Success for All’ versus the Academic ‘Decline’ of Black Students 88
- 5 Centering Raciolinguistic Ideologies in Two-Way Dual Language Education: The Politicized Role of Parents in Mediating their Children’s Bilingualism 111
- 6 Helping or Being Helped? The Influence of Raciolinguistic Ideologies on Parental Involvement in Dual Immersion 132
- 7 Hebrew Dual Language Bilingual Education: The Intersection of Race, Language and Religion 156
- 8 Raciolinguistic Positioning of Language Models in a Korean–English Dual Language Immersion Classroom 177
- 9 The Black and Brown Search for Agency: African American and Latinx Children’s Plight to Bilingualism in a Two-Way Dual Language Program 199
- 10 Who Gets to Count as Emerging Bilinguals? Adapting a Holistic Writing Rubric for All 220
- 11 One White Student’s Journey Through Six Years of Elementary Schooling: Uncovering Whiteness and Privilege in Two-Way Bilingual Education 244
- Conclusion: Bilingualism for All? Revisiting the Question 266
- Afterword: What is the Magic Sauce? 271
- Index 279