
Helen Avery

Teaching in the ‘edgelands' of the school day : The organisation of Mother Tongue Studies in a highly diverse Swedish primary school
Author
Summary, in English
To promote attainment and inclusion, Sweden offers tuition in migrant pupils’ mother tongues as a regular school subject. However, the formulation of learning aims is problematic, and resources allocated to the subject do not correspond to ambitions expressed in steering documents. This case study presents an analysis of the organization of Mother Tongue Studies at a highly diverse urban primary school, based on interviews with teachers and head teachers. The practical organization of Mother Tongue Tuition affects how mother tongue teachers and pupils are perceived, but also potentially provides opportunities for empowerment and educational development. Results indicate that in the investigated case, such opportunities are not exploited, placing mother tongue teachers in a state of continuous structural stress, while limiting the forms their teaching relationships can take. Additionally, scheduling the school subject Mother Tongue Studies at the ‘edgelands' of the school day contributed to further marginalizing languages taught as mother tongue and minimized interaction with class teachers.
Department/s
- Centre for Advanced Middle Eastern Studies
- Arabic Studies
- MECW: The Middle East in the Contemporary World
Publishing year
2015-07-02
Language
English
Pages
239-254
Publication/Series
Power and Education
Volume
7
Issue
2
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Topic
- Educational Sciences
- General Language Studies and Linguistics
Keywords
- Mother tongue instruction
- intercultural organisational development
- Sweden
- minority languages
- teacher collaboration
- language in education policy
- scheduling
- mother tongue teachers
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1757-7438