
Code Choice in the Language Classroom
Description
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Reviews / Votes
An extremely timely book on one of the most vexing issues in foreign language teaching: how much code-switching is acceptable or even desirable in the 21st century L2 classroom? Through a sound theoretical framework and concrete pedagogical examples, Glenn Levine develops an exciting, innovative multilingual approach to curriculum design, teaching, and articulation that engages the students in the co-construction of code choice conventions. -- Claire Kramsch, University of California at Berkeley, USA Glenn Levine's book deals with an issue that has only recently become topical, but which has been a fundamental tension in language education in practice for a very long time. He makes a cogent argument for language teaching and learning as a fundamentally bilingual endeavour in which all the languages available to the classroom can have an input role to play. For Levine, languages are not compartmentalised by rather they are thoroughly integrated in the work of teaching. This thoroughly evidenced study combines theory, data analysis and recommendations for practice. It is an important resource for both teachers and researchers. -- Anthony Liddicoat, University of South Australia, Australia Levine's book is clear, practical and thought-provoking...L2 teachers trying to come to terms with L2 teaching nowadays will certainly be encouraged, inspired and comforted by this book. Curriculum developers...will appreciate the conceptual and methodological framework presented by Levine. Scholars and students wishing to explore the main tenets of sociocultural approaches to L2 teaching will find this work to be a fine and thorough synthesis. -- Jose Aguilar Rio * LINGUIST List 22.2943 *More details
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Additional editions

Person
Content
Preface
Part 1: Conceptual Framework
1 Monolingual Norms and Multilingual Realities
2 The Conundrum of Babel: Toward a Theoretical Framework for a Multilingual Approach
3 What is a Code? What is Code-Switching?
Part 2: Empirical Support
4 The Code Choice Status Quo of the Language Classroom
5 The Discourse of Classroom Code Choice: Toward Becoming Bilingual
Part 3: Curriculum
6 An Architecture of Classroom Code Choice
7 Getting from Marked to Unmarked and Back Again: Articulation of Multilingual Classroom Communities of Practice
Epilogue: Blessings of Babel
References
Index
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