© 2008 Ingenta.This paper examines the role that educational policies and practices have played in weakening the Norf'k language, a contact language that developed among British sailors and their Tahitian entourage on Pitcairn Island in the late 18th century. It is argued that the education system was only one of several factors in the decline of Norf'k and that its projected revival will require more than just supportive educational measures
The paper introduces the worldwide phenomenon of language death, and briefly elaborates on the argum...
This article compares the functional roles of English, French, and Inuttitut in arctic Qué-bec. In t...
The article analyzes the educational systems in England and New Zealand forming a new linguistic spa...
Lesser-known varieties of English are predominately those spoken by racially mixed or non-European s...
This article investigates the role played by literacy and the modes chosen to put the spoken languag...
The Orkney and Shetland islands of Scotland were at one time colonized by Vikings and belonged firml...
Since 1984 and the election of a fourth Labour Government, New Zealand has been characterised as one...
This paper uses a sociohistorical lens to examine complex issues surrounding language-in-education p...
This paper investigates the case of diglossia in Shetland, northern Scotland: the use of dialect and...
The Manx language is currently enjoying a period of revitalization. The decline of the Manx language...
There are many pidgins and creoles around the world. Norfolk language (Norfolkese Creole English) is...
This chapter provides a comparative study of education provision for the Indigenous language of Saam...
There has been considerable debate about when Norn, the Scandinavian language formerly spoken in Ork...
In this chapter, we compare processes of language shift in two contexts with a particular focus on l...
After the Second World War missions in Papua New Guinea faced new imperatives driven by the reaction...
The paper introduces the worldwide phenomenon of language death, and briefly elaborates on the argum...
This article compares the functional roles of English, French, and Inuttitut in arctic Qué-bec. In t...
The article analyzes the educational systems in England and New Zealand forming a new linguistic spa...
Lesser-known varieties of English are predominately those spoken by racially mixed or non-European s...
This article investigates the role played by literacy and the modes chosen to put the spoken languag...
The Orkney and Shetland islands of Scotland were at one time colonized by Vikings and belonged firml...
Since 1984 and the election of a fourth Labour Government, New Zealand has been characterised as one...
This paper uses a sociohistorical lens to examine complex issues surrounding language-in-education p...
This paper investigates the case of diglossia in Shetland, northern Scotland: the use of dialect and...
The Manx language is currently enjoying a period of revitalization. The decline of the Manx language...
There are many pidgins and creoles around the world. Norfolk language (Norfolkese Creole English) is...
This chapter provides a comparative study of education provision for the Indigenous language of Saam...
There has been considerable debate about when Norn, the Scandinavian language formerly spoken in Ork...
In this chapter, we compare processes of language shift in two contexts with a particular focus on l...
After the Second World War missions in Papua New Guinea faced new imperatives driven by the reaction...
The paper introduces the worldwide phenomenon of language death, and briefly elaborates on the argum...
This article compares the functional roles of English, French, and Inuttitut in arctic Qué-bec. In t...
The article analyzes the educational systems in England and New Zealand forming a new linguistic spa...