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[Commlist] CFP Special Issue: Teaching and Learning Resources for Linguistic Minorities in Europe
Thu May 30 15:54:37 GMT 2024
CFP Special Issue: Teaching and Learning Resources for Linguistic
Minorities in Europe
This special issue of the Journal of Ethnopolitics and Minority Issues
in Europe (JEMIE) welcomes researchers employing interdisciplinary
approaches to contribute empirically grounded articles exploring
teaching and learning resources for linguistic minorities across Europe,
with a special focus on the national minorities.
The focal point of this special issue is the belief that access to
teaching and learning resources is essential for ensuring quality and
equitable education in minority languages. Teaching and learning
resources, encompassing textbooks, supplementary materials, as well as
both digital and printed teacher resources, can facilitate the alignment
of curricula, thereby reducing disparities across geographical regions
and fostering greater equity among minority language learners.
Teaching and learning resources also serve the purposes of cultural
heritage education, identity formation, and community cohesion.
Materials document the minorities' lives and this way make communities
visible both for the minority members themselves and the majority
society. Moreover, materials set standards for language use and cultural
canonization.
The term teaching and learning resources (TLR) encompasses a wide array
of pedagogical materials utilized for educational or self-directed
learning purposes across various contexts, spanning from school
textbooks to academic literature and from media texts to online
resources. TLR are adaptable for use within formal educational settings
as well as beyond the confines of traditional schooling. TLR is
typically referred to in different contexts as pedagogical, educational,
didactic, or instructional materials, resources, or content. They
encompass learners of various ages and levels of language skills.
When referring to linguistic minorities, we include communities of
minority, heritage, or second language speakers, whether officially
recognized or not by national governments, who have a longstanding
presence in the geographic area under consideration. This encompasses
national minority languages, regional languages, heritage languages,
home languages, and lesser-spoken or taught languages, often acquired as
second languages. These communities commonly face challenges related to
minority language preservation or revitalization, identity construction,
and the transmission of cultural heritage. In addressing these
objectives, TLR can play a pivotal role.
While there is a growing body of research on the presentation of
minorities in mainstream school textbooks, less is written about the
production, functions, uses and circulation of resources that are
targeting minorities and addressing minority languages themselves.
Therefore, this special issue aims to stimulate scholarly inquiry into
the emerging interdisciplinary field of TLR in the context of minority
languages, with a special focus on the national minority languages.
The special issue invites researchers from diverse disciplinary fields
utilizing qualitative, quantitative, or mixed-methods, as well as
critical, evaluative, and practice-based approaches, to investigate TLR.
Potential topics may include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Analysis of existing minority-language textbooks and pedagogical
materials from linguistic, cultural, and political perspectives
- Sociological structures of minority-language TLR production: materials
generated by authorities, civil society organizations, commercial
publishers, as well as learner-generated and community-created resources
- Minority-language policies and TLR development
- TLR in language education and learning
- Cultural literacy and heritage considerations in minority-language TLR
- Capacity building among teachers of minority languages
- Perspectives of learners on TLR development
- TLR's role in language revitalization and maintenance efforts
- Community-driven TLR initiatives and collaborative TLR development
- Opportunities and challenges presented by digital technologies,
platforms, artificial intelligence (AI), and big data in the context of
minority-language TLR
The anticipated publication date for this issue is spring/summer 2025.
Submissions
Please submit a 200-word abstract with 3–4 keywords written in English
by 19 August 2024 to (submissions /at/ natminforskning.se). Please add a
150-word author bio of all contributors.
The maximum length of full articles will be 8,000–10,000 words.
Submitted manuscripts must comply with the journal's guidelines for
authors (https://www.ecmi.de/JEMIE/index.php/journal/about/submissions)
and will be subject to a double-blind peer review. The journal does not
have an article processing charge (APC).
Important dates
August 19, 2024: Deadline for abstracts
September 2, 2024: Authors notified of acceptance
December 2, 2024: Deadline for submitted first draft (full papers)
Spring/summer 2025: Issue will be published
Editors of the special issue
For any inquiries, please contact the guest editors of the special issue:
Maarit Jaakkola (PhD, Associate Professor, University of Gothenburg,
Sweden; (maarit.jaakkola /at/ gu.se))
Boglárka Straszer (PhD, Professor, Dalarna University, Sweden; (bsr /at/ du.se))
More information
See the entire call online:
https://www.ecmi.de/JEMIE/index.php/journal/announcement/view/7
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