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Student Attitudes Toward Multilingual Education

Description: 
This research focuses on student attitudes toward multilingual education. Although much work has been done on multilingual education pedagogy and policy, almost none has been child-centered. Little consideration has been given to first-hand accounts of children in immersion programs. Through participatory observation, surveys, and focus group discussions with third grade students at a public, French immersion elementary school in the Pacific Northwest, I have found many common threads within student experiences of multilingual education. Specifically, students' fear of failure and peer-to-peer shaming when learning a new language can leave them feeling ambivalent toward French. This is not to say that the student experience is overwhelmingly negative; however, student attitudes seem to fall somewhere between their learned value for multilingualism and their lived experiences. Ultimately, this thesis highlights the importance of student narratives and the ways in which they can inform the development of immersion education programs.
Record Format: 
application/pdf
2012-12-07T23:11:10Z
2012
Subject: 
Bilingualism
Elementary education
Immersion
Language acquisition
Multilingualism
Student attitudes
Type: 
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
Raw Url: 
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/oai/request?metadataPrefix=&verb=GetRecord&identifier=oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/12513
Repository Record Id: 
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/12513
SetSpec: 
com_1794_7556
com_1794_7555
com_1794_7552
com_1794_7550
com_1794_13074
com_1794_6309
com_1794_151
col_1794_6124
col_1794_13076
Record Title: 
Student Attitudes Toward Multilingual Education
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/12513
Resource OE Format: 
randomness