Ethnography and Language Education
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E T H N O G R A P H Y A N D E D U C AT I O N
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ETHNOGRAPHY AND LANGUAGE EDUCATION
INTRODUCTION
The term ethnography refers both to a set of research methods and to the written report of information obtained by these methods. Originating in the discipline of anthropology, ethnographic methods include participant observation, face-to-face interviewing, researcher reflection/ journaling, and analysis of archival records (Eisenhart, 2001). Ethnography as a written genre is aimed at describing and understanding the cultural practices and perspectives of groups of people. Appropriating ethnography from anthropology in the 1970s or thereabouts, educational ethnographers were hopeful that ethnographic research methods might illuminate aspects of educational practice that were difficult to see in quantitative descriptions of learning and teaching activities. They were (and are) further hopeful that specific situated descriptions of the varieties of ways people organize their cultural and educational practices would prove helpful in improving schooling at all levels. Ethnographic language education researchers attempt to understand learners’ and teachers’ perspectives on how languages are taught and learned in local as well as larger societal contexts. After briefly examining the disciplinary history of the approach, focus in this chapter is on contemporary (1995–2005) ethnographic contributions to our understandings of language education. The chapter concludes with a discussion of problems with the research method and of future potential directions for research.
E A R LY D E V E L O P M E N T S
Franz Boas, one of the pioneers of North American anthropology and an eloquent advocate for anthropological fieldwork, argued at the end of the 1800s that understanding human culture and development could only be approached after systematic descriptions and analyses of the diverse means people used to organize their cultures. The necessity to produce descriptions and explanations of cultures, that is, to do and to produce ethnographies, began to be seen as urgent in the late nineteenth
K. A. King and N. H. Hornberger (eds), Encyclopedia of Language and Education, 2nd Edition, Volume 10: Research Methods in Language and Education, 177–187. #2008 Springer Science+Business Media LLC.
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KELLEEN TOOHEY
century with increasing worldwide recognition of the physical and social prices to be paid for technological “progress,” and increasing awareness of the destructive impact of European colonization of native peoples. Clifford (1983) noted that by the 1930s there was international agreement that theory in anthropology was to be generated on the basis of intensive descriptions (ethnographies) by qualified anthropologists who were physically present with “their people” for extended periods of time, participating in community activities, learning what they could of those people’s language, customs, practices, beliefs, and so on. Ethnographies of schooling became increasingly common in the 1970s at the same time that there was increasin
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