Menon, Shailaja and , Pallavi
(2022)
Beyond named languages: A step too far?
Contemporary Education Dialogue.
pp. 256-280.
ISSN 2249-5320
Abstract
Multilingual education is an urgent and pressing concern in the Indian
educational scenario. While the National Education Policy (2020)
acknowledges multilingualism as a resource in educational contexts and
reiterates earlier policies calling for mother tongue-based education in
elementary classrooms, it does not provide guidance in terms of how
to productively accommodate multiple languages in the classroom.
Multilingual education will be much stronger if it is based on a strong
understanding of multilinguality—the idea that the human mind is
fundamentally multilingual in nature. A new, but substantial paradigm
of scholarship addressing multilinguality is that of ‘translanguaging’,
which views named languages as socio-political constructs and
argues that multilinguals have a unified linguistic repertoire that they
flexibly, creatively and adaptively draw upon. Accepting the grounding
assumptions of translanguaging would has important implications for
curriculum, pedagogy and assessment in educational spaces. In this
article, we describe and critique the translanguaging perspective,
even while acknowledging its positive contributions. We point out,
especially its failure to provide guidance in terms of how to productively
accommodate translanguaging in classrooms.
Actions (login required)
 |
View Item |