scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Student Engagement in an Ottawa French Immersion High School Program

Josée Makropoulos
- 03 Sep 2010 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 3, pp 515-540
TLDR
The authors examined the engagement realities of two groups of students in an Ottawa French immersion high school program: those with and without a parent who makes them eligible for minority French language instruction as outlined by Section 23 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Free Speech.
Abstract
This article makes a contribution to the field of French immersion studies by examining the engagement realities of two groups of students in an Ottawa French immersion high school program: those with and without a parent who makes them eligible for minority French language instruction as outlined by Section 23 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Free ‐ doms Findings indicate that students from both official language groups, who came from varying class backgrounds, similarly demonstrated the ability and willingness to follow the secondary French immersion program offered at the university level Although students with Anglophone parents were found to benefit from cultural capital such as family sup ‐ port and “voluntary minority” belief systems, students with a parent eligible for minority French language instruction benefited from French language capital acquired with family, in social contexts and sometimes in French school At times, students also had overlapping and cross ‐ cutting realities depending whether they came from EFI or LFI programs To conclude, this article suggests that French immersion programming and related policies should take into consideration the multifaceted engagement realities of secondary student populations from the two official language communities Key words: French immersion studies, student engagement, official ‐ language communi ties, immigration Les resultats de la recherche demontrent que les etudiants issus des deux groupes linguistiques officielles et ayant diverses profils sociaux font etat d’un interet similaire dans leurs habiletes et leurs desirs de poursuivre leurs etudes au sein du programme d’immersion francaise offert au niveau universitaire Bien que les eleves ayant des parents anglophones semblent beneficier du capital culturel (tel que le support de la famille, les systemes de croyances associes aux «minorites volontaires»), ceux qui sont issus de familles dont l’un des parents est admissible a l’instruction dans la langue de  la minorite francaise ont egalement pu beneficier du capital associe a la langue fran‐ caise par le biais de la famille, dans les contextes sociaux et parfois dans les ecoles francaises Les eleves provenant des programmes d’immersion tardifs et precoces peuvent parfois vivre des realites transversales ou qui se chevauchent En conclusion cet article suggere que la programmation de l’immersion francaise ainsi que les politi‐ ques y afferant doivent tenir compte des multiples facettes des realites que vivent les eleves du secondaire issus des deux communautes de langue officielle Mots ‐ cles : Etudes des programmes d’immersion, engagement des eleves, commu ‐ nautes de langues officielles, immigration

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Heterogeneity and a Sociolinguistics of Multilingualism: Reconfiguring French Language Pedagogy

TL;DR: The author argues for a multidimensional, reflexive, and interdisciplinary approach for FLP and official bilingual education: one that values heterogeneity; as well as fosters a deeper engagement with the teaching (and learning) of languages, namely French.
Journal ArticleDOI

The paradoxical visions of multilingualism in education: the ideological dimension of discourses on multilingualism in Belgium and Canada

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine some contrasted discourses on multilingualism that circulate nowadays in the field of education, focusing on the cases of French-speaking Belgium and of the Franco-Ontarian community in Canada.
Dissertation

Engagement or despondence? Ontario middle-school core french teachers' perceptions of and experiences with the 2013 Ontario French as a second language curriculum

Rochelle Gour
TL;DR: This paper explored how four Ontario middle school French teachers understood and perceived the revised curriculum as well as how they are implemented it in Core French (CF) middle-school classrooms, and found that perceptions of the curriculum evolve over time and implementation is a dynamic process enhanced by support at the school and district levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Giving Voice to Our Core French Students: Implications for Attrition and the Discourse on the Benefits of Learning FSL in Ontario.

TL;DR: The authors explored student motivation to learn French as a second language (FSL) in school and explored the discourse on the benefits of learning French and debates its applicability to adolescent FSL learners.
Dissertation

'Sharing the same roof'? : a consociational approach to the compatibility of cultural identity schools with liberal democratic values

TL;DR: The authors examines the congruence of liberal democratic values with a conceptual framework for a national system of state-funded cultural identity schools and argues that the Modernist-Enlightenment response of difference-blind neutrality to the fact of social pluralism implicitly sanctions dominant socioeconomic structures.
References
More filters
Book

Identity and language learning : gender, ethnicity and educational change

Bonny Norton
TL;DR: Fact and fiction in language learning researching identity and language learning the world of adult immigrant language learners Eva and Mai - old heads on young shoulders mothers, migration, and language learner acquisition theory revisited claiming the right to speak in classrooms & communities as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Voluntary and Involuntary Minorities: A Cultural‐Ecological Theory of School Performance with Some Implications for Education

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the typology of minority groups as a heuristic device for analysis and interpretation of differences among minority groups in school experience and suggest some implications of the theory for pedagogy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating Bilingual Education: A Canadian Case Study

TL;DR: Evaluating Bilingual education: A Canadian Case Study as discussed by the authors was written as a synthesis and overview of a number of evaluations of French immersion programs in Canada, intended not only for researchers, but also for parents, educators and policy makers.
Book

Evaluating Bilingual Education: A Canadian Case Study

TL;DR: Evaluating Bilingual education: A Canadian Case Study as discussed by the authors was written as a synthesis and overview of a number of evaluations of French immersion programs in Canada, intended not only for researchers, but also for parents, educators and policy makers.
Related Papers (5)