The meanings of Hebrew: defining bilingual education in a dual-language charter school

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Author
Author
Avni, Sharon
Journal
International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
Details
Resource Type
Journal
Acquisition Number
BE025971
Published Date
05-25-2016 3:54 PM
Published Year
2015
Number of Pages
14
Language(s)
Subscription Only
No
Abstract
Using a discourse analytic framework that draws on theories of language ideologies, this paper analyzes the semiotics of a heritage language as it moves from the context of parochial education to the realm of public schooling. Specifically, it examines how Hebrew undergoes resemioticization when a Hebrew language charter school in the District of Columbia is established. I examine what Hebrew signifies through an analysis of two public texts: the Sela Public Charter School application and a community online forum. I identify how this new educational initiative redefines Hebrew teaching as a novel form of bilingual education that eschews discourses of identity, rights, and heritage. Next I show that the online forum participants attach diverse and contradictory meanings to Hebrew. This analysis examines the semiotic processes at work when a heritage language is untethered from its traditional communal context and transformed into a public language, and the ways in which bilingualism and bilingual education are reframed and contested in the process.
Topics
Heritage and Indigenous Language Programs
Charter Schools
Bilingual Students