ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Heritage Language Education provides the rapidly growing and globalizing field of heritage language (HL) education with a cohesive overview of HL programs and practices relating to language maintenance and development, setting the stage for future work in the field. Driving this effort is the belief that if research and pedagogical advances in the HL field are to have the greatest impact, HL programs need to become firmly rooted in educational systems. Against a background of cultural and linguistic diversity that characterizes the twenty-first century, the volume outlines key issues in the design and implementation of HL programs across a range of educational sectors, institutional settings, sociolinguistic conditions, and geographical locations, specifically: North and Latin America, Europe, Israel, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Cambodia. All levels of schooling are included as the teaching of the following languages are discussed: Albanian, Arabic, Armenian (Eastern and Western), Bengali, Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese, Czech, French, Hindi-Urdu, Japanese, Khmer, Korean, Pasifika languages, Persian, Russian, Spanish, Turkish, Vietnamese, and Yiddish. These discussions contribute to the development and establishment of HL instructional paradigms through the experiences of “actors on the ground” as they respond to local conditions, instantiate current research and pedagogical findings, and seek solutions that are workable from an organizational standpoint. The Routledge Handbook of Heritage Language Education is an ideal resource for researchers and graduate students interested in heritage language education at home or abroad.

part I|59 pages

A Landscape of Heritage/Community Languages

chapter 1|11 pages

The Constellation of Languages in Europe

Comparative Perspectives on Regional Minority and Immigrant Minority Languages

chapter 5|11 pages

Demographics and Heritage Languages in Canada

Policies, Patterns, and Prospects

part II|74 pages

Community Initiatives

chapter 6|14 pages

Crisis, Change, and Institutionalization

Adopting a New Curriculum at a Japanese Weekend School

chapter 8|14 pages

Innovations in the Teaching of Portuguese as a Heritage Language

The Case of Brazilian Complementary Schools in London and Barcelona

chapter 10|14 pages

The Role of Informal Heritage Language Learning in Program Building

Persian Community School Language Learners in Australia

part III|61 pages

Community Initiatives

chapter 13|12 pages

Innovation vs. Tradition in Language Education

A Case of Japanese Heritage Language Instruction in Chile

chapter 14|13 pages

Rationalization of the First Language First Model of Bilingual Development and Education

The Case of Russian as a Heritage Language in Israel

part IV|58 pages

Language Minority Communities and the Public School System

chapter 15|15 pages

Multilingual Los Angeles

Do Immigrant Language Communities Make an Impact on Language Education in Public High Schools?

chapter 16|15 pages

Overcoming the Obstacles

Vietnamese and Khmer Heritage Language Programs in California

chapter 18|15 pages

Engagement, Multiliteracies, and Identity

Developing Pedagogies for Heritage/Community Language Learners within the UK School System

part V|81 pages

Maintenance of Heritage/Community Languages in Public Schools

chapter 23|17 pages

“The Right to Mother-Tongue Education for Migrants in This City”

Factors Influencing the Institutionalization of a Two-Way Bilingual Immersion Program in Berlin

part VI|62 pages

Heritage/Community Languages in Higher Education

part VII|59 pages

Heritage/Community Language Maintenance from a Lifespan Perspective

chapter 28|14 pages

Chinese Heritage Language Learning

Negotiating Identities, Ideologies, and Institutionalization

chapter 30|13 pages

Korean Language Education in Japan

From Marginalized Heritage Language to Popular Foreign Language