Choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices

Masters of Art === South Africa, like many ex-colonial contexts finds itself confronting difficult decisions about multilingualism. The South Africa constitution recognizes eleven official languages and provides for education in these languages. At present, few parents opt to put their children in A...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jantjies, Nomxolisi
Other Authors: Stroud, Christopher
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/3226
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-32262017-08-02T04:00:24Z Choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices Jantjies, Nomxolisi Stroud, Christopher South Africa Education Assessment Identity Mobility Linguistic markets Cape Town Language of learning and teaching (LoLT) Masters of Art South Africa, like many ex-colonial contexts finds itself confronting difficult decisions about multilingualism. The South Africa constitution recognizes eleven official languages and provides for education in these languages. At present, few parents opt to put their children in African language classrooms.This study explores the case of an inner-city school in Cape Town which offered limited provisions in learning in Afrikaans and isiXhosa besides the main language English. The study elicited learners’ ideas and attitudes about the viability of these languages as languages of teaching and learning through the primary use of interviews. Learners’ perceptions of language are discussed within a language ideological framework that distinguishes between modernist and post modernist ideas of language in a transforming postmodern context.Among the findings are ideologically loaded discourses of how these learners undermine the use of Afrikaans and isiXhosa as languages of education in order to create or enact a certain learner identity which they deem appropriate for this context. Furthermore, downgrading of their languages is largely embedded in the need to separate languages of the home and education as some languages are more than others believed to offer social and economic flexibility. 2014-05-26T12:29:22Z 2014-05-26T12:29:22Z 2009 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11394/3226 en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic South Africa
Education
Assessment
Identity
Mobility
Linguistic markets
Cape Town
Language of learning and teaching (LoLT)
spellingShingle South Africa
Education
Assessment
Identity
Mobility
Linguistic markets
Cape Town
Language of learning and teaching (LoLT)
Jantjies, Nomxolisi
Choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices
description Masters of Art === South Africa, like many ex-colonial contexts finds itself confronting difficult decisions about multilingualism. The South Africa constitution recognizes eleven official languages and provides for education in these languages. At present, few parents opt to put their children in African language classrooms.This study explores the case of an inner-city school in Cape Town which offered limited provisions in learning in Afrikaans and isiXhosa besides the main language English. The study elicited learners’ ideas and attitudes about the viability of these languages as languages of teaching and learning through the primary use of interviews. Learners’ perceptions of language are discussed within a language ideological framework that distinguishes between modernist and post modernist ideas of language in a transforming postmodern context.Among the findings are ideologically loaded discourses of how these learners undermine the use of Afrikaans and isiXhosa as languages of education in order to create or enact a certain learner identity which they deem appropriate for this context. Furthermore, downgrading of their languages is largely embedded in the need to separate languages of the home and education as some languages are more than others believed to offer social and economic flexibility.
author2 Stroud, Christopher
author_facet Stroud, Christopher
Jantjies, Nomxolisi
author Jantjies, Nomxolisi
author_sort Jantjies, Nomxolisi
title Choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices
title_short Choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices
title_full Choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices
title_fullStr Choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices
title_full_unstemmed Choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices
title_sort choice of language for learning and assessment: the role of learner identity and perceptions in informing these choices
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/3226
work_keys_str_mv AT jantjiesnomxolisi choiceoflanguageforlearningandassessmenttheroleoflearneridentityandperceptionsininformingthesechoices
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