|
Ponencias y Afiches
(Volver a la página anteriorl) |
|
 |
|
Título
de la presentación:
|
Two-way
bilingual immersion (TWI) with low-income urban student
populations: Dilemmas of equity |
|
Tipo
de presentación:
|
Ponencia
de 30' |
|
Información
biográfica:
|
Jorgelina
Abbate-Vaughn is an assistant professor at the University
of Connecticut. Her research interests include the study
of bilingual and ethnically diverse student populations
in low-income urban settings, and the role of parental
and community involvement in the education of diverse
children. |
|
Resumen
de la presentación:
|
Two-way immersion (TWI) enjoys increasing popularity
in many United States' public schools as a successful
model of bilingual education that promotes the integration
of minority and mainstream children, often serving low-income
students and speakers of non-standard forms of the languages
in whose standard forms they are to become fluent bilinguals. |
|
Abstract: |
Two-way immersion (TWI) enjoys increasing popularity
in many United States' public schools as a successful
model of bilingual education that promotes the integration
of minority and mainstream children. Ninety-four percent
of all TWI programs serve Spanish speaking and mainstream
students. One third of the Hispanic population in
the U.S. is clustered around the largest urban school
districts, where the use of a non-standard form of
Spanish known as Spanglish is common. Concomitantly,
thirty-seven percent of all African-American students,
often raised in homes where vernacular English is
the main vehicle for communication, are the other
large constituency of urban public schools. These
large school districts manage to educate 62.4 percent
of children of poverty, measured by a family income
threshold that make their children eligible for free
or reduced price lunch in public schools. Thus, urban
TWI implementations in the States often serve students
of poverty who are also speakers of non-standard forms
of the languages in whose standard forms they are
to become fluent bilinguals.
|