This paper argues that languages, increasingly marginalised in schools in English-speaking countries, are gaining ‘elitist’ ground as part of the ‘value-added’ marketisation of schools and parents’ desire for their children to gain ‘positional goods’ through schooling. In arguing our case, the paper draws on survey and other data derived from second-language immersion programmes in two Queensland secondary schools, where key learning areas such as mathematics and science are taught through the medium of another language. As a corollary, we also argue that some schools – in our case, government schools – are using their immersion programmes as markers of distinction in a period of post-comprehensive schooling and emerging school markets, whi...
Whether the study of languages should be a core element of a balanced and broadly based curriculum f...
It is an underlying principle of AER 54 that active efforts should be made to cultivate the latent b...
Debates about language and literacy policies are increasingly constructed at national levels in rela...
This paper argues that languages, increasingly marginalised in schools in English-speaking countries...
Despite the contemporary policy rhetoric of global citizenry and the importance of languages and int...
THE 21ST CENTURY will require skills and dispositions of Australian students that allow them to part...
The current discourse in Australian languages education is that if children study languages in the e...
Much of the literature on social class and language study in schools argues that for middle-class pa...
Over the past twenty-five years, a growing number of second language immersion programs have been de...
In Australia, languages education in early childhood and primary education includes three main appro...
Whilst learning an additional language throughout compulsory schooling is increasingly the norm acro...
Various newspaper articles report that British ministers, university representatives, exam chiefs an...
as the foreign language at all levels of schooling. Unlike Australia where the debate continues abou...
This paper revisits the tension in sociolinguistics between the linguistic capital associated with l...
The case for increased second language learning in Australia is better grounded in the personal bene...
Whether the study of languages should be a core element of a balanced and broadly based curriculum f...
It is an underlying principle of AER 54 that active efforts should be made to cultivate the latent b...
Debates about language and literacy policies are increasingly constructed at national levels in rela...
This paper argues that languages, increasingly marginalised in schools in English-speaking countries...
Despite the contemporary policy rhetoric of global citizenry and the importance of languages and int...
THE 21ST CENTURY will require skills and dispositions of Australian students that allow them to part...
The current discourse in Australian languages education is that if children study languages in the e...
Much of the literature on social class and language study in schools argues that for middle-class pa...
Over the past twenty-five years, a growing number of second language immersion programs have been de...
In Australia, languages education in early childhood and primary education includes three main appro...
Whilst learning an additional language throughout compulsory schooling is increasingly the norm acro...
Various newspaper articles report that British ministers, university representatives, exam chiefs an...
as the foreign language at all levels of schooling. Unlike Australia where the debate continues abou...
This paper revisits the tension in sociolinguistics between the linguistic capital associated with l...
The case for increased second language learning in Australia is better grounded in the personal bene...
Whether the study of languages should be a core element of a balanced and broadly based curriculum f...
It is an underlying principle of AER 54 that active efforts should be made to cultivate the latent b...
Debates about language and literacy policies are increasingly constructed at national levels in rela...