Talk
Bilingual Education (Portuguese – Capeverdean): Language and Education Policies in Portugal
Ana Raquel Matias (Matias, A.R.); Pedro Martins (Martins, P.); Dulce Pereira (Dulce Pereira);
Event Title
The Fifteenth International Conference on Law, Language and Justice, IALL - the International Academy of Linguistic Law / Acade?mie Internacionale de Droit Linguistique, Zhejiang Police College
Year (definitive publication)
2017
Language
English
Country
China
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Abstract
The bilingual education project “Bilingual Class”, and the subsequent project “Multilingual School”, implemented in two schools of the 1st and 2nd cycle of basic education (2008-2013) by the Institute of Theoretical and Computational Linguistics (current CELGA/ILTEC), were pioneers in Portuguese Schools, involving students of Portuguese and immigrant backgrounds, mainly Cape Verdean. In addition to the teaching of (and in) Cape Verdean creole, and Portuguese, focus was given to the development of the students’ implicit and explicit linguistic awareness and positive linguistic attitudes, including their families and the school community. Research encompassed linguistic, sociolinguistic and school effects. The aim now is to continue the previous research by engaging in a new fieldwork, to improve the understanding of these students’ sociolinguistic reality, currently attending lower secondary education. The fact that immigrant background students from African Countries of Portuguese Official Language have systematically shown lower school achievement, compared either to students of non-immigrant origin or those of other immigrant origins, questions the efficiency of linguistic and educational policies, especially when there’s a seeming proximity between Portuguese and the minority language, like in the case of Cape Verdean creole. This longitudinal study, intending to evaluate the impact of an early bilingual education, is therefore especially relevant. For this paper, we focus on the macro scale of the ongoing research, analyzing the social and historical dynamics of Portuguese language policies, to contextualize the aforementioned projects. Firstly, we identify the main lines of education policies, concerning linguistic diversity and teaching of Portuguese as a Second Language. Secondly, we relate these tendencies with the impact of the two mentioned interventions and the current educational policies deriving from an economic crisis context. In an interdisciplinary approach (sociological and sociolinguistic), the aim is to contribute to the acknowledgement of linguistic diversity in Portuguese policies, and on effective citizen-centered approaches to such complexity.
Acknowledgements
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Keywords
Bilingual Education,Language Policies,Cape Verdean Creole,Descendants of Immigrants
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