Language Goes To School
A podcast about multilingual education in New Mexico and beyond. We invite a wide variety of experts in the field of multilingual education to address theories, practices, policies, and issues related to multilingual education. The primary goal of the podcast is to provide a platform that brings the art and science of multilingual education from the classrooms, where it is practiced, to wider audiences. Your host is David Aram Wilson, a retired multilingual educator and university lecturer in New Mexico, who educates multilingual students and teachers of the future.
In addition to tapping the Send a Text Message in the episode view of your podcast app, you can contact us via Facebook and Instagram @languagegoestoschool. Our e-mail address is languagegoestoschool@gmail.com. Our website is https://languagegoestoschool.buzzsprout.com. You can subscribe to the podcast by tapping Support the Show in the episode view. And please leave us a review in the show view of your app. Music by E. Grenga, C. Lawry, D. Stevens, M. McMahon/Ionics/RimoMusic. Artwork by Simon Young at Guerrilla Graphix
Language Goes To School
Warlance Chee (Part 1): Fledging Speakers of Diné Bizaad from the Nest!
Create in your mind an image of a parent bird feeding its babies mouth-to-mouth and you have an apt metaphor for the concept of a human language nest. In a language nest, adults who are fluent in a language that is experiencing a steep decline in the number first language speakers, surround the youngest speakers in the community with the language, all the while engaging these young speakers in culturally meaningful practices. Warlance Chee is a Navajo language and culture teacher and one of the founders of Saad K’idilyé, an urban language nest in Albuquerque, where babies—some even still in the womb—are surrounded Diné Bizaad, the Navajo language, spoken by adults fluent in the language. Saad K’idilyé means “the planting of the language” in Diné Bizaad, which is yet another apt metaphor for the link between language and culture, as the planting of corn and other crops at the school represents some of the traditional activities that link Diné Bizaad to Navajo culture. Listen as Warlance explains the founding of the Saad K’idilyé, how it has grown over the last three years, and how it hopes to expand in the future. We dedicate this episode to the late Lois M. Meyer, a long-time professor at the University of New Mexico, whose life work involved the establishment of language nests in indigenous communities in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca.
For more about Saad K'idilyé, visit: https://www.saadkidilye.org
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Text: Click on Send us a Text Message in the episode view of your app
Instagram & Facebook: @languagegoestoschool
Email: languagegoestoschool@gmail.com
Website: https://languagegoestoschool.buzzsprout.com