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Edwards, Viv; Newcombe, Lynda Prichard – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2005
This paper examines language reproduction in the family in the context of a highly innovative project in Wales, where the Welsh language has been in decline for over a century. Although Welsh-medium schooling has played a pivotal role in slowing and even reversing language shift in recent decades, there is mounting evidence of the dangers of …
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Publicity, Marketing, Welsh
Ravindranath, Maya – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Language shift is the process by which a speech community in a contact situation (i.e. consisting of bilingual speakers) gradually stops using one of its two languages in favor of the other. The causal factors of language shift are generally considered to be social, and researchers have focused on speakers' attitudes (both explicit and unstated)…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Foreign Countries, Participant Observation, Language Attitudes
Keefe, Anna; Tantillo, Vanessa; Norman, Dennis K. – National Indian Education Association, 2008
The National Indian Education Association (NIEA) has a long-standing commitment to protecting the cultural and linguistic traditions of Native American students. Towards strengthening these outcomes, they are initiating the development of the National Native Cultural Standards for Education project. To provide background support for future phases…
Descriptors: Cultural Education, American Indians, American Indian Education, Lifelong Learning
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Suhua, Hu – Chinese Education and Society, 2008
In general, the vitality and social functions of a language are assessed in connection with such indices as the language's intergenerational transmission, the absolute number of speakers and proportion of speakers in the population, its present domains of use, its development within diverse domains of use, and the availability of its educational…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Bilingual Students, Language Usage, Questionnaires
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Sims, Christine – Current Issues in Language Planning, 2008
Among American Indian Pueblo tribes, community-based language revitalisation initiatives have been established in response to a growing language shift towards English. This has been most prominent among school age children, prompting some tribes to extend tribal language programmes into local public schools. For centuries, the transmission of…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, American Indians, Bilingual Education, Oral Language
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Gottlieb, Nanette – Current Issues in Language Planning, 2008
This monograph discusses the language situation in Japan, with an emphasis on language planning and policy. Japan has long considered itself to be a monoethnic and therefore monolingual society, despite the existence of substantial old-comer ethnic minorities, and this--with the instrumental exception of English--has been reflected in its language…
Descriptors: Language Planning, Official Languages, Monolingualism, Foreign Countries
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
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Rogers, Vaughan; McLeod, Wilson – Linguistics and Education: An International Research Journal, 2006
This paper examines the relationship between policy and politics in relation to the development of public-sector primary education through Breton and Gaelic, considering closely the patterns of power through which such provision is delivered. Brittany and Scotland present many similarities as culturally distinctive territories, contained within…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Politics, Uncommonly Taught Languages, Language Minorities
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Vonen, Arnfinn Muruvik – Sign Language Studies, 2006
Inspired by Johnston's thought-provoking article, this article reports from the current Norwegian scene to make two main points. First, Norwegian Sign Language paradoxically appears to be better protected as well as more threatened than ever. Second, success in bilingual deaf education is not logically incompatible with a placement primarily in…
Descriptors: Deafness, Norwegian, Sign Language, Mainstreaming
Sekaquaptewa, Emory, Ed.; Pepper, Barbara, Ed. – 1994
Intended to promote the preservation of the Hopi language, two illustrated children's books present traditional Hopi tales in bilingual format. Based on a story told by Herschel Talashoema, "Coyote & Little Turtle" tells how Little Turtle tricked Coyote into carrying him from the hot sand that burned his feet to Little Turtle's home in a spring.…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Childrens Literature, Cultural Maintenance, Grammar
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Yamamoto, Akira Y., Comp. – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1996
This preliminary report presents the results of a 1995 Linguistic Society of America survey on endangered languages. The Endangered Languages Survey was prepared in consultation with other linguistic organizations such as the German Linguistic Group, Endangered Languages Clearing House, and the Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Maintenance, Databases, Educational Policy
Brooks, Barbara J. – 1992
There was a time in the Americas when many different languages were spoken by the diverse native peoples. This situation changed rapidly as waves of Europeans arrived, containing and controlling the native peoples, often forcing them to forfeit language and culture. Today remnants of some Native American tribes are striving to find ways to…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Anthropological Linguistics, Cherokee, Language Maintenance
Funaki, Inoke F. – 1984
Three areas of concern relative to Tongan Americans' acculturation to the United States are the focus of this paper. First, Tongan Americans believe that a high school education is sufficient. Although Tongan families come to the United States in the name of education, once they are here their objectives change. Seeing that high school graduates…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Educational Attitudes, Higher Education, Language Attitudes
Malinowski, Arlene – 1981
The aim of the paper is to ascertain the size and cultural vitality of the Sephardic component of the 50 Sephardic congregations and communities in the United States. Particular attention is focused on the extent to which Judeo-Spanish, the language of the Sephardim, continues to play a role within the group. The history of Sephardic expulsion and…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, Ethnic Groups, Immigrants, Judaism
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Beniak, Edouard; And Others – Canadian Modern Language Review, 1984
A sociolinguistic approach and ethnographic information are essential to the development of successful French native language instruction in Alberta and other francophone minority settings in Canada. Teachers should develop an appreciation of the local French and the sociocultural context to enhance students' motivation to learn and maintain their…
Descriptors: Dialects, Ethnography, Foreign Countries, French
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