This paper discusses data from a Dutch-medium secondary school in Brussels where almost all pupils speak a different language than Dutch at home. It illustrates that teachers’ preference for maintaining the school’s monolingual policy did not preclude their creation of haphazard or humorous multilingual interstices that temporarily alleviated the friction between the school language policy and the reality of pupils’ linguistic repertoires, and promoted the construction of an agreeable classroom climate. The paper argues, however, that these multilingual interstices also suggested ideal models of language use across differently valued discursive zones at school, and that the inclusion of unofficial linguistic resources in specific discursive...
Research suggests that in linguistically and socially diverse classrooms, teachers should draw on th...
Teachers are at the core of language education policies (LEP), as they interpret, negotiate and resi...
It is a recurrent observation that a source of problems with the linguistic diversity in multicultur...
In Flanders a perfect knowledge of the Dutch standard language is seen as necessary to be successful...
Societies have become more diverse due to migration flows. Children bring a variety of home language...
While much research has focused on how Western schools contain or silence the increasing multilingua...
Urban schools in Belgium have become increasingly multilingual. This invites pedagogical challenges ...
The empiric multilevel model presented in this paper intertwines sociolinguistics and school effects...
The contrast between the rigid school policies and monolingual beliefs on the one hand and the lingu...
The paper reports on the findings of a 12-month project within a broader research programme that loo...
© 2015 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This article aims to deepen our unde...
Dutch-medium schools in Brussels traditionally cater to a Dutch-speaking minority, but they have rec...
This article aims to deepen our understanding of the dynamic interaction between language policies, ...
This chapter argues that multilingual education is not the only way of responding to language divers...
Dutch-medium schools in Brussels traditionally cater to a Dutch-speaking minority, but they have rec...
Research suggests that in linguistically and socially diverse classrooms, teachers should draw on th...
Teachers are at the core of language education policies (LEP), as they interpret, negotiate and resi...
It is a recurrent observation that a source of problems with the linguistic diversity in multicultur...
In Flanders a perfect knowledge of the Dutch standard language is seen as necessary to be successful...
Societies have become more diverse due to migration flows. Children bring a variety of home language...
While much research has focused on how Western schools contain or silence the increasing multilingua...
Urban schools in Belgium have become increasingly multilingual. This invites pedagogical challenges ...
The empiric multilevel model presented in this paper intertwines sociolinguistics and school effects...
The contrast between the rigid school policies and monolingual beliefs on the one hand and the lingu...
The paper reports on the findings of a 12-month project within a broader research programme that loo...
© 2015 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This article aims to deepen our unde...
Dutch-medium schools in Brussels traditionally cater to a Dutch-speaking minority, but they have rec...
This article aims to deepen our understanding of the dynamic interaction between language policies, ...
This chapter argues that multilingual education is not the only way of responding to language divers...
Dutch-medium schools in Brussels traditionally cater to a Dutch-speaking minority, but they have rec...
Research suggests that in linguistically and socially diverse classrooms, teachers should draw on th...
Teachers are at the core of language education policies (LEP), as they interpret, negotiate and resi...
It is a recurrent observation that a source of problems with the linguistic diversity in multicultur...