ABSTRACT

This book explores the social, political, and historical forces that mediate language ideology and practices in post-colonial education and how such ideology and practices influence students’ academic achievement. Jean-Pierre provides empirical evidence that a relationship exists between language practices and school underperformance.

He takes Haiti as the focus of study, finding that students and teachers experience difficulty constructing knowledge in a setting in which the language they speak at home (Creole) differs from the language of instruction (French). The research is based on ethnographic data collected in classrooms in both private and public school settings in addition to different sectors of the society (e.g. state and private institutions).

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part |50 pages

Haiti

chapter |8 pages

Ayiti, Hispaniola, Saint-Domingue, and Then Haiti

A Brief Account of the Colonial History of Haiti

chapter |18 pages

From Ideologies About ‘Corrupted Language' to Linguistic Research

Unpacking Past and Present Representations of Creoles and Reconceptualizing Haitian

part |38 pages

Researching and Theorizing Language-in-Education in a Post-Colonial Context

chapter |21 pages

Language-in-Education in Haiti

Orienting Theories

chapter |15 pages

Language in Use in Haitian Classrooms

Research Methodology

part |96 pages

Doing Lessons in French and in Haitian in Two Schools

chapter |11 pages

“You don't know the lesson”

Teacher Talk in a Fourth Grade Geography Lesson at Mangofil School

chapter |9 pages

Considering the Significance of Local Plants in Haitian

A Sixth Grade Lesson at Mangofil School

chapter |24 pages

Reciting and Writing From the Textbook

A French-Medium Math Lesson in a Third Grade Classroom at Kaypro School

chapter |14 pages

Orienting to the Textbook as the Location of Knowledge

A Haitian Language Arts Lesson at Mangofil School

part |24 pages

Moving Beyond the Workings of Coloniality: Redefining Language and Education Futures

chapter |11 pages

Concluding Reflections

Redefining Language and Education Futures in Haiti