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- Title
Working downstream: a beginning EL teacher negotiating policy and practice.
- Authors
Malsbary, Christine; Appelgate, Mollie
- Abstract
This case study describes how a beginning teacher struggled to meet her students' needs in an ESL classroom. Her struggle demonstrated the interrelated nature of policy and practice: Policy effects in her school isolated her and made her feel solely responsible for the achievement of her newly arrived English-learning (EL) students. Her case demonstrated a critical issue in the United States: Namely, the effects of highstakes testing policies in the classroom serving ELs has led to a focus on student output (e.g., achievement scores), while discussions of input (e.g., knowledge of effective instructional practices, support across the professional life-span, and clear, coherent curriculum standards that include English-learning students) are much needed and widely absent. Further, these issues occurred in an unclear language policy environment where ideologies around bilingualism left the case study teacher confused. Ultimately, this study provokes the following questions: How do the effects of policy impact beginning teachers' ability to negotiate and contest policy? How is a teacher's negotiation and contestation of policy shaped by a specific policy context over time?
- Subjects
UNITED States; ENGLISH teachers; ENGLISH as a foreign language; NO Child Left Behind Act of 2001; LANGUAGE policy; TEACHING &; society; BILINGUALISM
- Publication
Language Policy, 2016, Vol 15, Issue 1, p27
- ISSN
1568-4555
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10993-014-9347-6