2003
DOI: 10.1207/s15327701jlie0201_1
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"Do You Know Your Language?" How Teachers of Punjabi and Chinese Ancestries Construct Their Family Languages in Their Personal and Professional Lives

Abstract: This study focuses on how teachers of minority ancestries construct and represent their family language identities. theory on culture, identity, and language we explore the complex nature of the linguistic identities of 25 teachers of Chinese and 20 teachers of Punjabi ancestries. We consider the different ways in which respondents of these ancestries represented their identities in minority languages in various sociocultural settings and the implications of these representations for employment. Accounting for… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…These readings brought into focus the different ways in which various program discourses were negotiated by the NNESTs. As I began wondering how to make sense of the very strong emphasis on a developing professional identity that I found in the portfolios, I turned to Bakhtin's theorizing of identity and processes of ideological becoming, which I had found useful in quite different research with teachers (see Beynon, Ilieva, Dichupa, & Hirji, 2003). Bakhtin's theorizing of struggles in developing one's own internally persuasive discourse and voice in the context of ideological becoming was, I believe, an apt theoretical lens for an analysis of the portfolios, as it allowed a critical look at the engagement the students had with, and thus possibilities for appropriation of, the authoritative discourses circulating in the program.…”
Section: Methodological Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These readings brought into focus the different ways in which various program discourses were negotiated by the NNESTs. As I began wondering how to make sense of the very strong emphasis on a developing professional identity that I found in the portfolios, I turned to Bakhtin's theorizing of identity and processes of ideological becoming, which I had found useful in quite different research with teachers (see Beynon, Ilieva, Dichupa, & Hirji, 2003). Bakhtin's theorizing of struggles in developing one's own internally persuasive discourse and voice in the context of ideological becoming was, I believe, an apt theoretical lens for an analysis of the portfolios, as it allowed a critical look at the engagement the students had with, and thus possibilities for appropriation of, the authoritative discourses circulating in the program.…”
Section: Methodological Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…English is the most important language for further education and employment in the United States, a finding consistent with the literature (e.g. Beynon et al, 2003). This monolingual and monocultural U.S. context added emphasis on the importance of English to these heritage learners.…”
Section: Home Culturesupporting
confidence: 86%
“…As many heritage-language teachers are minority-group members and immigrants themselves, heritage-language teachers should be guided to value their own rich cultural experiences and present a positive identity. Beynon et al (2003) warned about the importance of positive, if complex, cultural identity:…”
Section: Teachers As Critical Researchersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Role of language in culture in the South Asian diaspora Although second generation South Asians seem more at ease speaking their ML (often English) than their HL (Ghuman, 1991b), it is unknown whether South Asian Cultures, in fact depend on language for their sustainability (Beynon et al, 2003). Investigating this issue, Punetha et al (1987) …”
Section: Culture Shift In the South Asian Diasporamentioning
confidence: 99%