Many immigrants, refugees, and aboriginal Canadians learn their own languages in the normal, informal way. These minority languages learned informally are not valued as a skill that yields returns in the labor market in the same way the official languages or formally learned languages do. What counts as a skill in a society, in a given point in time, is the product of complex phenomenological, social, economic, ideological, and political processes. Discourse is key to this process of social and cultural reproduction. The discourse of Ontario employers socially constructs the definition of what counts as a skill in Ontario workplaces and thus what warrants value in the labor market. The notion of skill is a construction that is socially crea...
To fulfill Canada's aspirations to being a liberal and egalitarian state, its government must bring ...
Linguistic minority movements have long adopted dominant discourses linking language and community. ...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...
Many immigrants, refugees, and aboriginal Canadians learn their own languages in the normal, informa...
Many immigrants, refugees, and aboriginal Canadians learn their own languages in the normal, informa...
This article traces how a language and soft skills training approach to Canadian immigrant integrati...
“The destiny of a people is intricately bound to the way its children are educated” (RCAP 1996, v. 3...
This paper was originally published in the CERIS Working Paper Series. We thank CERIS for sharing it...
This paper compares and contrasts conditions of language in education for Native people, recent immi...
Employing critical discourse analysis (CDA), this paper examines the attempt to bridge a Canadian ad...
grantor: University of TorontoPluralist societies, particularly those whose pluralism is ...
This study explores the experiences of a culturally and linguistically diverse group of immigrant ad...
The underemployment of foreign-trained professional immigrants became an intense focus of Canadian i...
Reviewing studies of the functions of language assessment for recent immigrants to Canada, this arti...
This thesis examines the policy processes, social and power relations, and textual practices that ha...
To fulfill Canada's aspirations to being a liberal and egalitarian state, its government must bring ...
Linguistic minority movements have long adopted dominant discourses linking language and community. ...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...
Many immigrants, refugees, and aboriginal Canadians learn their own languages in the normal, informa...
Many immigrants, refugees, and aboriginal Canadians learn their own languages in the normal, informa...
This article traces how a language and soft skills training approach to Canadian immigrant integrati...
“The destiny of a people is intricately bound to the way its children are educated” (RCAP 1996, v. 3...
This paper was originally published in the CERIS Working Paper Series. We thank CERIS for sharing it...
This paper compares and contrasts conditions of language in education for Native people, recent immi...
Employing critical discourse analysis (CDA), this paper examines the attempt to bridge a Canadian ad...
grantor: University of TorontoPluralist societies, particularly those whose pluralism is ...
This study explores the experiences of a culturally and linguistically diverse group of immigrant ad...
The underemployment of foreign-trained professional immigrants became an intense focus of Canadian i...
Reviewing studies of the functions of language assessment for recent immigrants to Canada, this arti...
This thesis examines the policy processes, social and power relations, and textual practices that ha...
To fulfill Canada's aspirations to being a liberal and egalitarian state, its government must bring ...
Linguistic minority movements have long adopted dominant discourses linking language and community. ...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...