ABSTRACT

Grounded in both theory and practice, with implications for both, this book is about children’s perspectives on the borders that society erects, and their actual, symbolic, ideational and metaphorical movement across those borders. Based on extensive ethnographic data on children of immigrants (mostly from Mexico, Central America and the Philippines) as they interact with undergraduate students from diverse linguistic, cultural and racial/ethnic backgrounds in the context of an urban play-based after-school program, it probes how children navigate a multilingual space that involves playing with language and literacy in a variety of forms.

Immigrant Children in Transcultural Spaces speaks to critical social issues and debates about education, immigration, multilingualism and multiculturalism in an historical moment in which borders are being built up, torn down, debated and recreated, in both real and symbolic terms; raises questions about the values that drive educational practice and decision-making; and suggests alternatives to the status quo. At its heart, it is a book about how love can serve as a driving force to connect people with each other across all kinds of borders, and to motivate children to engage powerfully with learning and life.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction And Overview

chapter 2|15 pages

Blurring Borders At B-Club

Research, Theory, Practice

chapter 3|9 pages

Seeing With Our Hearts

chapter 4|13 pages

A Pedagogy Of Heart And Mind

chapter 5|8 pages

Shining Lights In A Globalized World

chapter 6|14 pages

Faces Of Globalization

The Community Context

chapter 7|10 pages

Learning And Love

chapter 8|15 pages

Transculturation

chapter 9|14 pages

Translanguaging

chapter 10|11 pages

Transliteracies

chapter 11|8 pages

Policy, Practice, And Possibilities

Imagining Teaching and Learning for a New World