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 K-5 multilingual educator and currently a full-time lecturer at the University of New Mexico, where he educates future multilingual teachers.
You can contact us by tapping the Send us Fan Mail in the episode view of your podcast app, or via Facebook and Instagram @languagegoestoschool.
Our Gmail 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. A $3/month subscription is actually a generous contribution to the show.
And please leave us a review in the show view of your app.
Final sound mixing by Auphonic.com.
Music by E. Grenga, C. Lawry, D. Stevens, M. McMahon/Ionics/RimoMusic.
Artwork by Simon Young at Guerrilla Graphix
Language Goes To School
Shooting for the Moon in Baoulé
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Those who don't speak the dominant language of their region as their first language know all too well that language status—and the consequences of it—are real. Without being entirely conscious of it, all societies have developed language hierarchies that place some languages in positions of prestige, at or near the top of the hierarchy, while relegating other languages to positions of subordination, at or near the bottom of the hierarchy. This is most evident in regions where, long ago, a colonial language established its dominance by declaring its superiority, while simultaneously suppressing the use of the indigenous languages that had been present in the region since the beginning of time. In this episode, we hear how awareness of language statuses played out in a remote Baoulé village in central Côte d'Ivoire in the mid 1980s when a woman from the village took a visitor from the United States to school, so to speak, regarding the topic of language hierarchies. We learn some handy Baoulé proverbs along the way. Also discussed: threatened languages and moribund languages.
Marie's Dictionary: The Last Speaker of Wukchumni: https://youtu.be/iRDmRXCizEM?si=D0H3T4CHUCqYRi3l
Contact us!
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