Translingual Identities and Transnational Realities in the U.S. College Classroom

Regular price €167.40
A01=Heather Robinson
A01=Jonathan Hall
A01=Nela Navarro
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African American English
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Author_Heather Robinson
Author_Jonathan Hall
Author_Nela Navarro
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Black English
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=CBX
Category=CFB
Category=CFDM
Category=CJ
Category=JNA
Category=JNLB
Category=JNM
Category=JNU
College Composition Classroom
COP=United Kingdom
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EAP
Ell
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Global University
Grammatical Literacy
Heather Robinson
Intellectual Autobiography
International Graduate Students
international students
Jonathan Hall
language identity
Language Inheritance
Language Minority Students
language policy
language variation
Language_English
literacies
Long Term English Language Learner
Native Speaker English Status
Nela Navarro
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Permanent Residents
Price_€100 and above
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Raciolinguistic Ideologies
softlaunch
Trans-national Identity
translanguaging
Translanguaging Pedagogy
Translingual Approach
translingual pedagogy
translingual practice
Translingual Turn
translingualism
translinguality
transnational students
transnationalism
Undergraduate Students
Urban College
Urban College Student

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367026363
  • Weight: 610g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Mar 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Exploring the roles of students’ pluralistic linguistic and transnational identities at the university level, this book offers a novel approach to translanguaging by highlighting students’ perspectives, voices, and agency as integral to the subject. Providing an original reconsideration of the impact of translanguaging, this book examines both transnationality and translinguality as ubiquitous phenomena that affect students’ lives.

Demonstrating that students are the experts of their own language practices, experiences, and identities, the authors argue that a proactive translingual pedagogy is more than an openness to students’ spontaneous language variations. Rather, this proactive approach requires students and instructors to think about students’ holistic communicative repertoire, and how it relates to their writing. Robinson, Hall, and Navarro address students’ complex negotiations and performative responses to the linguistic identities imposed upon them because of their skin color, educational background, perceived geographical origin, immigration status, and the many other cues used to "minoritize" them. Drawing on multiple disciplinary discourses of language and identity, and considering the translingual practices and transnational experiences of both U.S. resident and international students, this volume provides a nuanced analysis of students’ own perspectives and self-examinations of their complex identities. By introducing and addressing the voices and self-reflections of undergraduate and graduate students, the authors shine a light on translingual and transnational identities and positionalities in order to promote and implement inclusive and effective pedagogies.

This book offers a unique yet essential perspective on translinguality and transnationality, and is relevant to instructors in writing and language classrooms; to administrators of writing programs and international student support programs; and to graduate students and scholars in language education, second language writing, applied linguistics, and literacy studies.

Heather Robinson is an associate professor of English at York College, CUNY, USA.

Jonathan Hall is a professor of English at York College, CUNY, USA.

Nela Navarro is the Director of the Graduate English Language Learners and International Teaching Assistants Program at Rutgers English Language Institute (RELI), and an assistant teaching professor and assistant director of the English Writing Program at Rutgers University, USA.