A2 Review article, Literature review, Systematic review
A language socialisation perspective on Swedish immersion in Finland : Students, teachers, and parents as key actors (2022)


Björklund, S., Mård-Miettinen, K., & Pakarinen, S. (2022). A language socialisation perspective on Swedish immersion in Finland : Students, teachers, and parents as key actors. Journal of Immersion and Content-Based Language Education, 10(2), 323-342. https://doi.org/10.1075/jicb.21019.bjo


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsBjörklund, Siv; Mård-Miettinen, Karita; Pakarinen, Sanna

Journal or seriesJournal of Immersion and Content-Based Language Education

ISSN2212-8433

eISSN2212-8441

Publication year2022

Publication date08/08/2022

Volume10

Issue number2

Pages range323-342

PublisherJohn Benjamins Publishing Company

Publication countryNetherlands

Publication languageEnglish

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1075/jicb.21019.bjo

Publication open accessNot open

Publication channel open accessChannel is not openly available

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/82696


Abstract

This retrospective review applies a language socialisation perspective in examining the findings of a four-year research project on Swedish immersion in Finland. Findings from nine sub-studies within the project are reported with a point-of-view from three key actors’ (teachers, students, and parents) language socialisation processes. Results show that a special feature of immersion teacher socialisation is its continuous attention toward the additive multilingual nature of immersion education, which requires sustained attention to multilingual language use and development. Students in Swedish immersion are socialised into the use of multiple languages in school and act as socialisation agents also outside school. They bring the immersion language to their homes and influence the family language use. Immersion may thus have a considerable influence on how majority language speakers self-identify as language users. Altogether, the sub-studies demonstrate that the benefits of immersion education extend well beyond learning success of students.


Keywordslanguageslanguage learningbilingualismmultilingualismlanguage immersionuse of languagesocialisationSwedish languageteachersstudentsparents

Free keywordsimmersion students; language majority; immersion teachers; multilingualism; bilingual education; immersion parents; Swedish immersion; language socialisation


Contributing organizations


Related projects


Ministry reportingYes

Reporting Year2022

JUFO rating1


Last updated on 2024-03-04 at 19:17