#4060. “It’s better language”: The social meanings of academic language in an elementary classroom
September 2026 | publication date |
Proposal available till | 22-05-2025 |
4 total number of authors per manuscript | 0 $ |
The title of the journal is available only for the authors who have already paid for |
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Journal’s subject area: |
Language and Linguistics;
Linguistics and Language;
Education; |
Places in the authors’ list:
1 place - free (for sale)
2 place - free (for sale)
3 place - free (for sale)
4 place - free (for sale)
Abstract:
Despite an increased interest in academic language in recent years, critical and sociopolitical perspectives in this area of scholarship remain scarce. This paper presents brings such perspectives to the study of academic language by proposing a framework that highlights its situated social meanings through a focus on social identities and language ideologies. An ethnographically informed discourse analysis of a second-grade student’s interactions with peers and adults shows how she used language locally understood as “academic” as a resource for positioning herself as authoritative, intellectually able, and appropriately behaving. Her constructions of these identities tended to reproduce hegemonic ideologies of language, class, race, gender, sexuality, the body, and emotionality, although at times her practices unsettled other dominant discourses, such as adult–child hierarchies.
Keywords:
Social communication; language ideologies; dominant discourses; adult–child hierarchies; academic language
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