When language policy and pedagogy conflict: pupils’ and educators’ ‘practiced language policies’ in an English-medium kindergarten classroom in Greece
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Abstract
An international school (BES) in Greece, overwhelmingly attended by Greek origin
children, has adopted, as its language policy, English as the ‘official’ medium of
interaction, including in the Reception classroom, the target of this research. That is,
through its language policy, the school aims to promote the learning and use of
English throughout school. At the same time, the school has adopted ‘free
interaction’ in designated play areas as its pedagogical approach. The aim of this
approach is to promote learners’ autonomy and, in the particular case, it could be
interpreted as including the possibility of using Greek. Thus, a conflicting situation
has developed: how to reconcile the school’s English monolingual language policy
and the pedagogical approach in the play areas? Reception educators are expected to
police the use of English in the kids’ play areas without however undermining
children’s autonomy and/or disrupting their ‘free interaction’.
The feelings and views expressed by educators show that they are seriously
concerned about how this conflicting situation can be approached. The aim of this
thesis is to respond to this issue of concern by providing a detailed description of
how the school’s conflicting policies are actually lived in the educators’ and pupils’
language choice practices in the play areas of their classroom. By adopting the
Applied Conversation Analytic perspective of “description-informed action”
(Richards 2005), a perspective whereby practitioners are made aware of their own
practices and are left to “make (their own) decisions regarding the continuation or
modification” of their own policies and practices (Heap, 1990: 47), the aim is to raise
BES stakeholders’ awareness about the possible advantages, possibilities and
limitations of their policies and practices in Reception, and thus pave the way to
more informed language policy making and practice in the school.
The data consists of audio-recorded naturally occurring child-child and childadult
interactions in the school’s play areas. The analytic framework draws on
Spolsky (2004), for whom “the real language policy of a community” resides in its
language practices (hence the notion of ‘practiced language policy’), and on
conversation analytic methodologies applied to language choice (Auer 1984,
Gafaranga 2000, 2001, 2005, 2007a, 2009).
The key finding is that, adult school members and children respond to the
school’s conflicting policy demands in different ways, i.e. by orienting to different
‘practiced language policies’. On the one hand, as the adults’ ‘medium request’
(Gafaranga 2010) practices in the kids’ play areas demonstrate, from the adult
perspective, at all times, participants need to attend to a language preference that is
‘institutionally-assigned’, i.e. adults orient to a ‘practiced language policy’ that is in
line with the “declared” (Shohamy 2006) English monolingual language policy of the
school. This shows that they have responded to the school’s conflicting policy
demands by prioritising the school’s language policy (use of English) at the expense
of the pedagogical approach (learners’ autonomy). On the other hand, children
approach the conflicting situation differently. Children seem to have developed an
alternative ‘practiced language policy’ according to which language choice during
peer group interaction is not organised around the school’s “declared” (ibid)
language policy but around their interlocutor’s “linguistic identity” (Gafaranga
2001). This alternative language policy allows the kids to attend to the pedagogical
approach (learner autonomy and free interaction).
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