Dual Language EducationLindhold-Leary (child development, San Jose St. U.) examines dual language education (DLE), an approach to language learning in which both language majority and language minority students are integrated into a single classroom, with opportunities for all students to achieve full bilingualism and biliteracy, multicultural competence, and academic excellence. The author presents data from 20 DLE programs in U.S. schools, at different stages of implementation. Coverage includes teacher background factors and attitudes; classroom interactions; parent attitudes and reasoning; evaluation outcomes of the 4,900 students in the 20 programs; student attitudes, motivations, self-esteem, and their beliefs about the benefits of bilingualism. The implications for other language education models are also included. Distributed by UTP Distribution. c. Book News Inc. |
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Page 175
... free - lunch students ) and the remainder ( 44 % ) were low - SES ( free lunch ) . Ethnicity breakdown was as follows : 45 % Hispanic Spanish speakers , 18 % Hispanic English speakers , 28 % European American English speakers , 8 ...
... free - lunch students ) and the remainder ( 44 % ) were low - SES ( free lunch ) . Ethnicity breakdown was as follows : 45 % Hispanic Spanish speakers , 18 % Hispanic English speakers , 28 % European American English speakers , 8 ...
Page 282
... free - lunch partici- pants least satisfied ( mean = 3.1 ) and non - free - lunch students as satis- fied as students from the other ethnic groups ( mean = 3.5 ) . African American students on free lunch were also less likely to enjoy ...
... free - lunch partici- pants least satisfied ( mean = 3.1 ) and non - free - lunch students as satis- fied as students from the other ethnic groups ( mean = 3.5 ) . African American students on free lunch were also less likely to enjoy ...
Page 286
... free - lunch participants were more satisfied than were free- lunch students in 90HI programs . Combined with less satisfaction were more negative academic attitudes on the part of these free - lunch participants . In 90LO programs ...
... free - lunch participants were more satisfied than were free- lunch students in 90HI programs . Combined with less satisfaction were more negative academic attitudes on the part of these free - lunch participants . In 90LO programs ...
Contents
Acknowledgements | 1 |
Theoretical and Conceptual Foundations for Dual Language | 39 |
Classroom Administrative and Familial Contexts in Dual | 77 |
Copyright | |
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90HI students 90LO programs academic achievement African American students alternative assessment Asian American assessment attitudes average bilingual education bilingual proficiency bilingual programs California Chapter child classroom environment cognitive cultural DLE model DLE program DLE students dual language education effective schools English and Spanish English reading English speakers English-speaking ethnic ethnic/language EURO European American Fifth Figure FLOSEM free lunch Genesee grade level groups Hakuta higher levels Hisp-Bil Hisp-EB Hisp-SP Hispanic immersion education important L1 read language background language development language education model language education programs language minority students Lapkin learning levels of bilingual Levine & Lezotte Lindholm linguistic longitudinal low-SES math mathematics achievement monolingual multicultural NCE scores oral language proficiency parental involvement participants peers percentage program type reading achievement sample school sites SDAIE second language significant skills Spanish language Spanish speakers Spanish-speaking students students scored studies Swain Table target language TBE teachers teaching