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Kasun, G. Sue; Hernandez, Tomás; Montiel, Hortensia – Multicultural Perspectives, 2020
For better or worse, English continues to expand as the commonly shared lingua franca throughout the world. With an increasing movement of transnational students--armed with English and flowing across borders--three university professors discuss their pedagogies and ways of knowing as they engage transnational students inside Mexican university…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preservice Teachers, English Teachers, Teacher Educators
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Kasun, G. Sue; Scott, Jessica; Kaneria, A. Jyoti; Delavan, M. Garrett – Bilingual Research Journal, 2021
Colonial and decolonial tensions manifested in a unique, Mexican school for the deaf that used Mexican Sign Language for instruction. (De)colonial tensions were inherent in the school's work, from its non-Mexican, Foreign-origin school board to its child-of-deaf-adults principal's vision. We observed the presence of a colonial legacy, decolonial…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Deafness, Sign Language, Mexicans
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Scott, Jessica A.; Kasun, G. Sue – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2021
Little is known about the educational experiences of deaf children in Mexico. Schools for the deaf exist, but no research has examined instructional practices for children in these contexts. In this study, we adopt a sociocultural framework for language acquisition to document and understand how teachers at a bilingual (Mexican Sign Language and…
Descriptors: Deafness, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods, Sign Language
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Hidalgo Aviles, Hilda; Kasun, G. Sue – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2019
We write from a public university in Mexico's interior, as 2 language professors from countries with fraught, yet intertwined, sets of histories--Mexico and the United States. Having lived in 2 countries with dramatic increases in nationalist policies, we reflect on having lived abroad through the increases in nationalism in our lived experiences.…
Descriptors: Nationalism, Teacher Education Programs, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning