6533b7d5fe1ef96bd1264590

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Dynamic Multimodal Language Practices in Multilingual Indigenous Sámi Classrooms in Finland

Anne Pitkänen-huhtaSari Pietikäinen

subject

Geographymedia_common.quotation_subjectPedagogyEthnographyPremiseLanguage revitalizationContext (language use)MultilingualismCreativityIndigenousLiteracyLinguisticsmedia_common

description

Starting from the premise that dynamic language practices are an emerging property of interaction, and that languages are learnt by participating in language practices, we focus in this chapter on the tensions and creativity that arise from complex, changing, and interconnected multilingual discourses, practices, and experiences in indigenous Sami classrooms. Drawing on longitudinal ethnographic and discourse-analytic research on a multilingual indigenous Sami community in Finland, we will examine the strategies and practices that a group of Sami children develop, use, and modify while navigating this complex terrain. We illustrate the various ways in which the children adopt and play with the emergent norms and use their linguistic and cultural resources to navigate in a multilingual educational context. The aim of this study was to highlight the multilingual repertoires of these children, validate their literacy practices, and evaluate the presence of multilingualism and Sami languages in the classroom.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7317-2_9