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Peer reviewedBerlin, Lawrence N. – Journal of American Indian Education, 2000
Often, American Indian and Alaska Native children do not learn their tribal languages as first languages. Therefore, schools can play a pivotal role in reversing language shift by addressing circumstances specific to second language learning. The field of second language acquisition and teaching can provide teachers of indigenous languages with…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Maintenance
Peer reviewedBarratt-Pugh, Caroline; Rohl, Mary – Reading Teacher, 2001
Describes a one-year research project in a Western Australia primary school in a low socioeconomic area, which has a Khmer-English bilingual program to develop and extend children's English and Khmer language and literacy. Discusses findings concerning the children's written progress in both languages, and children's perceptions of their identity…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Bilingual Education Programs, Cambodian, Cambodians
Burns, Allan – Cultural Survival Quarterly, 1998
A University of Yucatan (Mexico) professor who taught a Mayan linguistics course to indigenous teachers in Mayan discusses three issues that are central to understanding how indigenous education interacts with pan-Maya identity: the importance of locally developed Maya literature, the symbols used to define Maya culture, and a conflict over Maya…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Bilingual Education, Bilingual Teachers, Cultural Maintenance
Peer reviewedHinton, Leanne – Southwest Journal of Linguistics, 1995
California is extremely linguistically diverse, with one of the largest numbers of deeply endangered indigenous languages. None of its 50 living Indian languages are being learned at home by children, with few native speakers left. Outlines some language activism that native Californians are using to help develop new speakers and save their…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indians, Bilingual Education Programs, Cultural Awareness
Peer reviewedReynolds, Gretchen – Canadian Children, 1998
Describes a visit by an early childhood educator to the Tungasuvvingat Inuit Head Start Program in Ottawa. Explains how this program, funded by Health Canada under the Aboriginal Head Start Initiative, emphasizes retention of the Inuit culture and language in its curriculum activities and materials, special events, daily routines, parent education…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Cultural Activities, Cultural Education, Cultural Maintenance
Hill, Liz – Native Americas, 2001
Mainstream media spreads misperceptions that American Indian gaming benefits just a few, is not well regulated, and encourages criminal activity. The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act mandates that gaming revenues fund tribal government programs; now that they have their own revenue, tribes are enthusiastically funding educational programs to maintain…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Cultural Maintenance, Elementary Secondary Education, Financial Support
Peer reviewedPacini-Ketchabaw, Veronica; Bernhard, Judith K.; Freire, Marlinda – Bilingual Research Journal, 2001
Extensive interviews examined how school processes influenced home language practices of 45 Latino families in Canada. Parents felt that Spanish maintenance fostered family unity, Latino identity, and professional advancement, but assimilative pressures sometimes caused doubts about openly speaking Spanish at home. Strategies parents used to…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Bilingual Education, Educational Needs, Elementary Secondary Education
Paciotto, Carla – International Journal of Bilingual Education & Bilingualism, 2004
In 1991, the Bilingual Bicultural Education Program (BBEP) was launched in Chihuahua, Mexico, as a way of responding to the educational needs of the indigenous Tarahumara populations and the growing threat to their language and culture. Using a conceptual framework based on the literatures of curriculum inquiry, language shift and maintenance,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Maintenance, Educational Needs, Multicultural Education
Rau, Cath – International Journal of Bilingual Education & Bilingualism, 2005
One of the aims of Maori-medium education is to address Maori language loss. One of the challenges facing Maori-medium educators is to identify configurations that acknowledge the substantive importance of English language instruction without detracting from the priority that must be given to the regeneration of the Maori language. Issues…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Skill Attrition, Language Acquisition, English Instruction
Lasimbang, Rita; Kinajil, Trixie – Current Issues in Language Planning, 2004
In 1995, the Kadazandusun language was created as a standard form of all the Dusunic group of languages so that it might be taught in schools as a language subject. In the planning of Kadazandusun, terminology building involves both the creation of new terms that appropriate present-day categories and artefacts, and the selection of suitable…
Descriptors: Language Planning, Cultural Awareness, Foreign Countries, Language Minorities
Ahler, Janet Goldenstein – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2007
Early federal government policies for American indigenous people alternated between extermination and assimilation. Imposing the colonists' and immigrants' language on indigenous people was important for achieving the latter. In the 1970-90's, federally funded grants for bilingual education for indigenous schools were offered to accommodate Native…
Descriptors: Immigration, Bilingualism, Ethnography, American Indians
Reese, Leslie; Goldenberg, Claude – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2006
This article examines language and literacy use in two communities in which Spanish-speaking children live and attend school, documenting the confounding of socioeconomic status, ethnic density, and access to Spanish language and print. Drawing on community observations and interviews with parents and children in a yearlong ethnographic study, we…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Case Studies, Language Usage, Spanish Speaking
Australian Dept. of Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs, Canberra. – 1995
The booklet describes efforts to preserve Australian Aboriginal languages and culture, profiles individuals who have a significant role in these efforts, contains individuals' commentaries on Aboriginal language issues, gives background information on the languages and language groups, and describes programs and organizations supporting the…
Descriptors: Australian Aboriginal Languages, Cultural Background, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethnic Groups
Smith, Doug; And Others – 1993
This work is one in a series that focuses on nine languages representing the bulk of the second language learning effort in Australian education (Arabic, Modern Standard Chinese, French, German, Modern Greek, Indonesian/Malay, Italian, Japanese, and Spanish). These languages were categorized as the Languages of Wider Teaching. This particular…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Chinese, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
Tomiyama, Machiko – 1994
This study examined the loss of proficiency in English as a Second Language (ESL) by Japanese children returning to Japan after a period of time in the United States. Three children who lived in the United States with their families for between 4 and 7 years were interviewed on a monthly basis after their return to Japan. The interviewer engaged…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Children, Elementary Education, English (Second Language)

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