Macau’s Languages in Society and Education [electronic resource] : Planning in a Multilingual Ecology / by Andrew J. Moody.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Series: Multilingual Education ; 39Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2021Edition: 1st ed. 2021Description: XXI, 265 p. 66 illus., 1 illus. in color. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783030682651
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 418.0071 23
LOC classification:
  • P51-59.4
Online resources:
Contents:
Chapter 1. The Sociolinguistics of Size: How Multilingualism in a Small Society Differs from a Large One -- Chapter 2. Historical Contexts of Multilingualism: Macau Languages (1500–1999) -- Chapter 3. Recent Developments in Macau Multilingualism: Macau English and the Foundations of a Middle Class -- Chapter 4. Multilingualism and English in Primary and Early Childhood Education: Head Starts and Cram Schools -- Chapter 5. Multilingualism and English in Secondary Education: Language Policy and Pluralism -- Chapter 6. English and Chinese in Macau Tertiary Education: Global Trends and Local Responses -- Chapter 7. Future Status and Functions of Multilingualism in Macau: Language Planning in Education -- Chapter 8. Conclusion: Cultural and Linguistic Identities in Small Societies.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: This book examines the role of English within education and society in the quickly changing city of Macau. Macau’s multilingual language ecology offers the unique opportunity to examine language planning and policy issues within a small speech community. The languages within the ecology include several Chinese varieties, such as Cantonese, Putonghua and Hokkien, European languages like Portuguese and English, and a number of Asian languages that include, among others, Burmese, Filipino languages, Japanese, Timorese, etc. As the smallest city in South China's Pearl River Delta, Macau has sought to maintain cultural and linguistic independence from its larger neighbours, and independence has been built upon an historic commitment to multilingualism and cultural plurality. As economic development and globalisation offer new opportunities to a growing middle class, the sociolinguistics of a small society constrain and influence the language policies that the territory seeks to implement. Macau's multilingual and pluralistic response to language needs within the territory echoes historical responses to similar challenges and suggests that small communities function sociolinguistically in ways that differ from larger communities.
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Chapter 1. The Sociolinguistics of Size: How Multilingualism in a Small Society Differs from a Large One -- Chapter 2. Historical Contexts of Multilingualism: Macau Languages (1500–1999) -- Chapter 3. Recent Developments in Macau Multilingualism: Macau English and the Foundations of a Middle Class -- Chapter 4. Multilingualism and English in Primary and Early Childhood Education: Head Starts and Cram Schools -- Chapter 5. Multilingualism and English in Secondary Education: Language Policy and Pluralism -- Chapter 6. English and Chinese in Macau Tertiary Education: Global Trends and Local Responses -- Chapter 7. Future Status and Functions of Multilingualism in Macau: Language Planning in Education -- Chapter 8. Conclusion: Cultural and Linguistic Identities in Small Societies.

This book examines the role of English within education and society in the quickly changing city of Macau. Macau’s multilingual language ecology offers the unique opportunity to examine language planning and policy issues within a small speech community. The languages within the ecology include several Chinese varieties, such as Cantonese, Putonghua and Hokkien, European languages like Portuguese and English, and a number of Asian languages that include, among others, Burmese, Filipino languages, Japanese, Timorese, etc. As the smallest city in South China's Pearl River Delta, Macau has sought to maintain cultural and linguistic independence from its larger neighbours, and independence has been built upon an historic commitment to multilingualism and cultural plurality. As economic development and globalisation offer new opportunities to a growing middle class, the sociolinguistics of a small society constrain and influence the language policies that the territory seeks to implement. Macau's multilingual and pluralistic response to language needs within the territory echoes historical responses to similar challenges and suggests that small communities function sociolinguistically in ways that differ from larger communities.

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