Morphology And The Education Of The ELL

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Cultural Case Study: Maria This cultural case study examines the language competencies, social and human capital assets of a Spanish immigrant to the U.S. named Maria. She is 16 and lives in a community where the Hispanic population is considerable. Her family is supportive and engaged in her life and she receives substantial assistance from them. She is motivated and does well in her studies. She is able to practice her L1 and her L2 all the time thanks to a school that is good at helping ELLs and a community that shares in her ethnic background where her L1 is still commonly used among the inhabitants. This paper also provides some simple suggestions for what the school could do to continue to help Maria to achieve her objectives.

Introduction

Maria is an ELL who has a strong personal and cultural identity. She is Hispanic -- an immigrant from Spain -- and is 16 years old. She is in possession of strong human and social capital. Her family of mother, father, two sisters and brother are very supportive and offer her strong supportive relationships that she can and does use to give her confidence, support, direction and guidance (Suarez-Orozco, Rhodes, Milburn, 2009). She is friendly, outgoing, positive, communicative, inquisitive, helpful towards others, motivated, and disciplined. She does not demonstrate any stressors because she is always positive and always views challenges as opportunities and not as obstacles. She is motivated to be a primary care nurse and she has friends in her community, which is very bilingual oriented (a majority of Hispanics live in the community). She draws on the her L1 language competencies (is fluent in Spanish, can read, write, listen and speak the language), and her L2 language competencies are very good as well (she can read, write, listen to and speak the L2). Her types of capital and competencies have worked together to help her achieve academic success, which has helped her achieve some standing in the community, as she is recognized by others as doing well in school and being a leader.

Maria the Language Learner

As a language learner and a student, her capital and competencies have enabled her to want to pursue higher education and obtain a career in the medical field as a primary care provider. She wants to be bilingual and use both her languages so that she can help many different types of people and be someone whom others seek out for help and care....

...

Her social and human capital has been gained by her strong familial supports because they have given her the confidence to be herself, ask questions, work hard, make friends easily, and set goals for herself. Her family is very positive and always outgoing and friendly. They do not ever appear to be sad or depressed. Maria has not experienced any discrimination because the community in which she lives is very welcoming of people of her ethnic background.
Maria has several benefits in terms of social well-being, emotional well-being and academic achievement and future career: she has support from teachers and peers; she relates well with others, she has good, positive goals for herself (she wants to go to college and become a nurse) and she has shown the ability to improve her language competencies. She shows emotional consistency and an ability and desire to advance in academic achievement. Her choice in a future career not only seems possible but highly likely as she will be a bi-lingual nurse and that is something that could easily earn her a job.

Maria's Community

Maria has plenty of time to practice Spanish because of the community in which she lives, which offers people who speak Spanish, some publications in Spanish, and some resources (such as menus) that are printed in Spanish for the local population. She is very intelligent because it is clear that she has a lot of experience exercising her mental faculties. As Pettito and Kovelman (2013) note, being bilingual does place certain demands on the brain's processes, and as Maria matures and begins to be in a position where she can use her Spanish more (in a job, for instance, where Spanish-speaking nurses are needed for Spanish-speaking patients), her fluency will most likely get even stronger. This level of bilingualism enhances the benefits she enjoys because it gives her a good solid footing for the future.

Its connection to the Immigrant Paradox and the Achievement Gap is meaningful in the sense that right now Maria has strong supports that she can rely upon to develop her language competencies. Without those supports, she would not fare half as well as she has. The fact that she has them and has the desire to succeed and has a clear goal for herself that would allow her to implement her bilingualism shows that she is looking ahead realistically and with common sense. She will achieve success thanks to her focus, her application…

Sources Used in Documents:

References

Anderson, V. & Garrison, J.M. (2014). Language and Culture Vignette, Week 1. EDUC

526 course content materials, Concordia University, Seward, Nebraska. [PDF]

Pettito, L. A., & Kovelman, I. (2003). The Bilingual Paradox: How signing-speaking

bilingual children help us to resolve bilingual issues and teach us about the brain's mechanisms underlying all language acquisition. Learning Languages, 8(3), 5-18. [PDF]
Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics, eds. Tej K. Bhatia and William C. Ritchie Retrieved from http://www1.uni-hamburg.de/romanistik/personal/pdf-Dateien/bilchild.pdf


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