ABSTRACT

Weaving together a richly diverse range of student voices, perspectives, and insights, this collection of studies from around the world offers the educational community a better understanding of K-12 and adult Chinese–heritage students’ languages, cultures, identities, motivations, achievements, and challenges in various cross-cultural settings outside North America. Specifically, it addresses these overarching questions:

  • What are Chinese–heritage students’ experiences in language and education in and outside schools? How do they make sense of their multiple ethnic and sociocultural identities?
  • What unique educational challenges and difficulties do they encounter as they acculturate, socialize, and integrate in their host country? What are their common struggles and coping strategies?
  • What are the instructional practices that work for these learners in their specific contexts? What educational implications can be drawn to inform their teachers, fellow students, parents, and their educational communities in a global context?

Individual chapters employ different theoretical frameworks and methodological instruments to wrestle with these questions and critical issues faced by Chinese–heritage learners.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Understanding Chinese–Heritage Learners' Lived Educational Experiences in the Global–Local Nexus: Languages, Cultures, and Identities

part I|92 pages

Languages, Cultures, and Identities of Chinese–Heritage Learners in Glocalized Realities

part II|86 pages

Motivation, Challenges, and Adaptation of Chinese–Heritage Learners in and across Globalized Contexts

part III|58 pages

Teaching, Schooling, and Pedagogical Possibilities for Chinese–Heritage Learners

part IV|17 pages

Summary and Closing Thoughts

chapter 14|8 pages

Chinese–Heritage Learners De/Re-Territorializing Transnational Social Field

Identities, Conflicts, and Possibilities

chapter |7 pages

Afterword

Towards Worlding Practice