This presentation explores how race,
culture, and language intersect to create the condition of contemporary
learning. For years, research on the language of classrooms explored how the way
we say things impacts students’ sense of belonging. Despite this research,
Science and Technology Education have failed to adequately explore how issues of
race, language, and culture shape the outcomes of teaching and learning in
science. Through a sequence of research, this presentation explores the
theoretical and pragmatic aspects of this dilemma. From a theoretical
perspective, the talk will explore the Language-Identity dilemma. As students
learn, the way academic language is taught to them can present a cognitive and
cultural conflict. From a cognitive perspective, if science is taught without
respect to the implications of how language is learned, students can be
misunderstood and misunderstand the teacher’s complex discourse. From a cultural
conflict perspective, students may feel they are cultural outsiders when the
language of the classroom positions them as outsiders. The presentation provides
an overview of a series of qualitative and quantitative experiments that
document the realities of this complex interaction.
SPEAKERS:
Bryan Brown (Stanford University: Stanford, CA)