Just who do you think I am? The name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youth

Abstract For immigrant-receiving societies that also claim to embrace diversity, there is a constant tension between constraining individual agency (the ability to have and act on choices) and recognizing individual rights. In a previous article, the author highlighted the ways in which newcomer...

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Main Author: Dawn Allen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Carleton University 2007-08-01
Series:Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics
Online Access:https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/CJAL/article/view/19740
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spelling doaj-9c44cdf1e7834bb2a400c45f598027412021-03-02T07:56:08ZengCarleton UniversityCanadian Journal of Applied Linguistics1481-868X1920-18182007-08-01102165175Just who do you think I am? The name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youthDawn Allen0McGill UniversityAbstract For immigrant-receiving societies that also claim to embrace diversity, there is a constant tension between constraining individual agency (the ability to have and act on choices) and recognizing individual rights. In a previous article, the author highlighted the ways in which newcomer youth are constrained by school discourses (e.g. programs, curricula, codes of conduct, evaluation criteria, ways of speaking, valuing, thinking) that emphasize those students’ linguistic deficiencies. This article explores the students’ agency despite the constraints of those discourses. The article begins with a focus on some of the reasons for the tension between individual agency and the discourses of the integration programs of Montreal secondary schools. Next, the article briefly presents a theoretical frame (connecting identity and agency), which is then used to interpret the integration experiences of four newcomer adolescents in a francophone secondary school in Montreal. The author concludes that French is too often experienced as a barrier to rather than a source of agency and proposes that French be learned through more inclusive practices right from the beginning of newcomers’ experience in Quebec.https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/CJAL/article/view/19740
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dawn Allen
spellingShingle Dawn Allen
Just who do you think I am? The name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youth
Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics
author_facet Dawn Allen
author_sort Dawn Allen
title Just who do you think I am? The name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youth
title_short Just who do you think I am? The name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youth
title_full Just who do you think I am? The name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youth
title_fullStr Just who do you think I am? The name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youth
title_full_unstemmed Just who do you think I am? The name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youth
title_sort just who do you think i am? the name-calling and name-claiming of newcomer youth
publisher Carleton University
series Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics
issn 1481-868X
1920-1818
publishDate 2007-08-01
description Abstract For immigrant-receiving societies that also claim to embrace diversity, there is a constant tension between constraining individual agency (the ability to have and act on choices) and recognizing individual rights. In a previous article, the author highlighted the ways in which newcomer youth are constrained by school discourses (e.g. programs, curricula, codes of conduct, evaluation criteria, ways of speaking, valuing, thinking) that emphasize those students’ linguistic deficiencies. This article explores the students’ agency despite the constraints of those discourses. The article begins with a focus on some of the reasons for the tension between individual agency and the discourses of the integration programs of Montreal secondary schools. Next, the article briefly presents a theoretical frame (connecting identity and agency), which is then used to interpret the integration experiences of four newcomer adolescents in a francophone secondary school in Montreal. The author concludes that French is too often experienced as a barrier to rather than a source of agency and proposes that French be learned through more inclusive practices right from the beginning of newcomers’ experience in Quebec.
url https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/CJAL/article/view/19740
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