Skip to main content Site map

Immersion Education: Practices, Policies, Possibilities


Immersion Education: Practices, Policies, Possibilities

Paperback by Tedick, Diane J.; Christian, Donna; Fortune, Tara Williams

Immersion Education: Practices, Policies, Possibilities

WAS £29.95   SAVE £4.49

£25.46

ISBN:
9781847694027
Publication Date:
5 Jul 2011
Language:
English
Publisher:
Channel View Publications Ltd
Imprint:
Multilingual Matters
Pages:
312 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 29 - 31 May 2024
Immersion Education: Practices, Policies, Possibilities

Description

This volume builds on Fortune and Tedick's 2008 Pathways to Multilingualism: Evolving Perspectives on Immersion Education and showcases the practice and promise of immersion education through in-depth investigations of program design, implementation practices, and policies in one-way, two-way and indigenous programs. Contributors present new research and reflect on possibilities for strengthening practices and policies in immersion education. Questions explored include: What possibilities for program design exist in charter programs for both two-way and indigenous models? How do studies on learner outcomes lead to possibilities for improvements in program implementation? How do existing policies and practices affect struggling immersion learners and what possibilities can be imagined to better serve such learners? In addressing such questions, the volume invites readers to consider the possibilities of immersion education to enrich the language development and educational achievement of future generations of learners.

Contents

Merrill Swain: Foreword Diane J. Tedick, Donna Christian and Tara Williams Fortune: Acknowledgements Introduction to the Volume Diane J. Tedick, Donna Christian and Tara Williams Fortune: The Future of Immersion Education: An Invitation to 'Dwell in Possibility' Section I: Practices in Immersion Program Design Siv Björklund and Karita Mård-Miettinen: Integrating Multiple Languages in Immersion: Swedish Immersion in Finland William H. Wilson and Kauanoe Kamana: Insights from Indigenous Language Immersion in Hawai?i: The Case of Nawahi School Gareth Diaz Zehrbach: Two-Way Immersion Charter Schools: An Analysis of Program Characteristics and Student Body Compositions Section II: Program Outcomes and Implications for Practice Kathryn Lindholm-Leary: Student Outcomes in Chinese Two-Way Immersion Programs: Language Proficiency, Academic Achievement, and Student Attitudes Ester J. de Jong and Carol I. Bearse: The Same Outcomes for All? High School Students Reflect on Their Two-Way Immersion Program Experiences Sandra Burger, Alysse Weinberg, Carla Hall, Parvin Movassat, and Amelia Hope: French Immersion Studies at the University of Ottawa: Program Evaluation and Pedagogical Challenges Section III: Language Use and Assessment Practices in Immersion Programs Pádraig Ó Duibhir: 'I thought that we had good Irish': Irish Immersion Students' Insights into Their Target Language Use Maggie Broner and Diane J. Tedick: Talking in the 5th Grade Classroom: Language Use in an Early, Total Spanish Immersion Program Lizette Peter, Gloria Sly and Tracy Hirata-Edds: Using Language Assessment to Inform Instruction in Indigenous Language Immersion Section IV: Policy and Practice in Immersion Education Philip Hoare: Context and Constraints: Immersion in Hong Kong and Mainland China Lisa Dorner: US Immigrants and Two-Way Immersion Policies: The Mismatch between District Designs and Family Experiences Tara Williams Fortune: Struggling Learners and the Language Immersion Classroom Concluding Synthesis Chapter for the Volume Fred Genesee: Reflecting on Possibilities for Immersion

Back

University of the Highlands & Islands logo