TY - JOUR
T1 - Native American youth discourses on language shift and retention
T2 - Ideological cross-currents and their implications for language planning
AU - McCarty, Teresa L.
AU - Romero-Little, Mary Eunice
AU - Zepeda, Ofelia
N1 - Funding Information:
We wish to acknowledge support from the US Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, for providing the funding for the Native Language Shift and Retention Study. We also thank the CRCs, research assistants, and the Alice Wiley Snell Endowment for Education Policy Studies for support of the senior author’s work on the project. All data, statements, opinions, and conclusions or implications in this paper solely reflect the view of the authors and research participants, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the funding agency, tribes or their tribal councils, the Arizona Board of Regents or Arizona State University, under whose auspices the project operates. This information is presented in the pursuit of academic research and is published in this volume solely for educational and research purposes. Pursuant to our agreement with the Arizona State University Internal Review Board, this paper may not be reproduced in any medium, transmitted or distributed, in whole or in part, without the authors’ prior written consent.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - This paper examines preliminary findings from an ongoing federally funded study of Native language shift and retention in the US Southwest, focusing on in-depth ethnographic interviews with Navajo youth. We begin with an overview of Native American linguistic ecologies, noting the dynamic, variegated and complex nature of language proficiencies and practices across a continuum of sociocultural settings. We then examine two pairs of youth discourses that illuminate social-psychological and macro-structural influences on language practices. These discourses juxtapose language identity with language endangerment, and language pride with language shame. As such, they expose the ways in which language allegiance is tied to the distribution of power and privilege in the larger society. Youth discourses, we argue, represent a powerful call to action for communities and schools serving Native American students. We conclude with the implications for future research and for language education planning in Indigenous and other endangered-language communities.
AB - This paper examines preliminary findings from an ongoing federally funded study of Native language shift and retention in the US Southwest, focusing on in-depth ethnographic interviews with Navajo youth. We begin with an overview of Native American linguistic ecologies, noting the dynamic, variegated and complex nature of language proficiencies and practices across a continuum of sociocultural settings. We then examine two pairs of youth discourses that illuminate social-psychological and macro-structural influences on language practices. These discourses juxtapose language identity with language endangerment, and language pride with language shame. As such, they expose the ways in which language allegiance is tied to the distribution of power and privilege in the larger society. Youth discourses, we argue, represent a powerful call to action for communities and schools serving Native American students. We conclude with the implications for future research and for language education planning in Indigenous and other endangered-language communities.
KW - Indigenous languages
KW - Language ideologies
KW - Language planning
KW - Language revitalisation
KW - Native American language eduation
KW - Native American youth
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U2 - 10.2167/beb386.0
DO - 10.2167/beb386.0
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:33750709283
SN - 1367-0050
VL - 9
SP - 659
EP - 677
JO - International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
JF - International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
IS - 5
ER -