Building Connections and Critical Language Awareness between Learning Communities Collaborating across Two Distant States

Can Critical Language Awareness (CLA) be increased through sociolinguistically based student projects in learning communities collaborating across distant states? If so, how can educators detect this increase in CLA? During the spring of 2020, students in mixed learning communities (SHL/L2) at the i...

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Main Authors: Damián Vergara Wilson, Marisol Marcin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-10-01
Series:Languages
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/7/4/257
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author Damián Vergara Wilson
Marisol Marcin
author_facet Damián Vergara Wilson
Marisol Marcin
author_sort Damián Vergara Wilson
collection DOAJ
description Can Critical Language Awareness (CLA) be increased through sociolinguistically based student projects in learning communities collaborating across distant states? If so, how can educators detect this increase in CLA? During the spring of 2020, students in mixed learning communities (SHL/L2) at the intermediate level at two large universities collaborated through online tools to deepen their sociolinguistic understanding of the Spanish of the United States through authentic sociolinguistic data collection. The data for the current study come from interviews with four of these students and from their final reflection papers, providing participant-based depictions of their language experience including criticality and resistance to it. We find evidence that students already expressed elements of CLA before entering the class, and that they also achieved new critical insights through participating and collaborating in class projects. To identify gains in CLA conveyed by student voices, we operationalized CLA as expressions of language experience that either challenged hegemonic paradigms (e.g., stigmatization of certain forms) or identified the role of hegemonic forces in collective or individual behavior. In order to tie CLA to widespread tools used in education, we connect it to notions of the Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy. Overall, we propose observable goals that can be used to understand and assess the presence of CLA in students’ discourse.
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spelling doaj.art-0278392f7ed240b08783d17611d906062023-11-24T16:09:41ZengMDPI AGLanguages2226-471X2022-10-017425710.3390/languages7040257Building Connections and Critical Language Awareness between Learning Communities Collaborating across Two Distant StatesDamián Vergara Wilson0Marisol Marcin1Department of Spanish and Portuguese, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USADepartment of Global Studies, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY 13902, USACan Critical Language Awareness (CLA) be increased through sociolinguistically based student projects in learning communities collaborating across distant states? If so, how can educators detect this increase in CLA? During the spring of 2020, students in mixed learning communities (SHL/L2) at the intermediate level at two large universities collaborated through online tools to deepen their sociolinguistic understanding of the Spanish of the United States through authentic sociolinguistic data collection. The data for the current study come from interviews with four of these students and from their final reflection papers, providing participant-based depictions of their language experience including criticality and resistance to it. We find evidence that students already expressed elements of CLA before entering the class, and that they also achieved new critical insights through participating and collaborating in class projects. To identify gains in CLA conveyed by student voices, we operationalized CLA as expressions of language experience that either challenged hegemonic paradigms (e.g., stigmatization of certain forms) or identified the role of hegemonic forces in collective or individual behavior. In order to tie CLA to widespread tools used in education, we connect it to notions of the Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy. Overall, we propose observable goals that can be used to understand and assess the presence of CLA in students’ discourse.https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/7/4/257critical language awarenessBloom’s TaxonomySpanish as a Heritage LanguageL2/HL mixed methods
spellingShingle Damián Vergara Wilson
Marisol Marcin
Building Connections and Critical Language Awareness between Learning Communities Collaborating across Two Distant States
Languages
critical language awareness
Bloom’s Taxonomy
Spanish as a Heritage Language
L2/HL mixed methods
title Building Connections and Critical Language Awareness between Learning Communities Collaborating across Two Distant States
title_full Building Connections and Critical Language Awareness between Learning Communities Collaborating across Two Distant States
title_fullStr Building Connections and Critical Language Awareness between Learning Communities Collaborating across Two Distant States
title_full_unstemmed Building Connections and Critical Language Awareness between Learning Communities Collaborating across Two Distant States
title_short Building Connections and Critical Language Awareness between Learning Communities Collaborating across Two Distant States
title_sort building connections and critical language awareness between learning communities collaborating across two distant states
topic critical language awareness
Bloom’s Taxonomy
Spanish as a Heritage Language
L2/HL mixed methods
url https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/7/4/257
work_keys_str_mv AT damianvergarawilson buildingconnectionsandcriticallanguageawarenessbetweenlearningcommunitiescollaboratingacrosstwodistantstates
AT marisolmarcin buildingconnectionsandcriticallanguageawarenessbetweenlearningcommunitiescollaboratingacrosstwodistantstates