Bridging Home And School: Factors That Contribute To Multiliteracies Development In A Yup'ik Kindergarten Classroom

Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2010 Since the establishment of a Yup'ik immersion school in Bethel in the mid-1990s, immersion programming has spread to many schools in Southwestern Alaska, including the school in this study. This school maintains a K-3 Yup'ik strand and a K...

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Main Author: Bass, A. Sarah
Other Authors: Parker-Webster, Joan, Siekmann, Sabine
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8576
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/8576 2023-05-15T18:46:00+02:00 Bridging Home And School: Factors That Contribute To Multiliteracies Development In A Yup'ik Kindergarten Classroom Bass, A. Sarah Parker-Webster, Joan Siekmann, Sabine 2010 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8576 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8576 Linguistics Program Elementary education Bilingual education Thesis ma 2010 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:37:05Z Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2010 Since the establishment of a Yup'ik immersion school in Bethel in the mid-1990s, immersion programming has spread to many schools in Southwestern Alaska, including the school in this study. This school maintains a K-3 Yup'ik strand and a K-3 English strand. Both strands merge in the 4 th grade. Concern that the immersion program may hinder student achievement on state mandated benchmark testing in the 3rd grade and beyond has resulted in some opposition to the immersion program. However, in 2007/2008, those and former immersion students scored higher on the English reading and writing benchmark tests than students in the English strand and 3rd and 4th grade students district wide. This ethnographic teacher action research documented the process of multiliteracies development of four kindergarten students. Home literacy practice of students was documented from parent conversations. Classroom literacy development was documented through the collection of student work samples, still photographs, and teacher comments from anecdotal notes. Findings revealed these four students showed progress in their multiliteracies development as illustrated in their drawings, writing, and singing and chanting. Some of the contributing factors that emerged were: Yup'ik/English heard at home, Yup'ik at school, and literacy materials available both at home and school. Thesis Yup'ik Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Fairbanks
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language unknown
topic Elementary education
Bilingual education
spellingShingle Elementary education
Bilingual education
Bass, A. Sarah
Bridging Home And School: Factors That Contribute To Multiliteracies Development In A Yup'ik Kindergarten Classroom
topic_facet Elementary education
Bilingual education
description Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2010 Since the establishment of a Yup'ik immersion school in Bethel in the mid-1990s, immersion programming has spread to many schools in Southwestern Alaska, including the school in this study. This school maintains a K-3 Yup'ik strand and a K-3 English strand. Both strands merge in the 4 th grade. Concern that the immersion program may hinder student achievement on state mandated benchmark testing in the 3rd grade and beyond has resulted in some opposition to the immersion program. However, in 2007/2008, those and former immersion students scored higher on the English reading and writing benchmark tests than students in the English strand and 3rd and 4th grade students district wide. This ethnographic teacher action research documented the process of multiliteracies development of four kindergarten students. Home literacy practice of students was documented from parent conversations. Classroom literacy development was documented through the collection of student work samples, still photographs, and teacher comments from anecdotal notes. Findings revealed these four students showed progress in their multiliteracies development as illustrated in their drawings, writing, and singing and chanting. Some of the contributing factors that emerged were: Yup'ik/English heard at home, Yup'ik at school, and literacy materials available both at home and school.
author2 Parker-Webster, Joan
Siekmann, Sabine
format Thesis
author Bass, A. Sarah
author_facet Bass, A. Sarah
author_sort Bass, A. Sarah
title Bridging Home And School: Factors That Contribute To Multiliteracies Development In A Yup'ik Kindergarten Classroom
title_short Bridging Home And School: Factors That Contribute To Multiliteracies Development In A Yup'ik Kindergarten Classroom
title_full Bridging Home And School: Factors That Contribute To Multiliteracies Development In A Yup'ik Kindergarten Classroom
title_fullStr Bridging Home And School: Factors That Contribute To Multiliteracies Development In A Yup'ik Kindergarten Classroom
title_full_unstemmed Bridging Home And School: Factors That Contribute To Multiliteracies Development In A Yup'ik Kindergarten Classroom
title_sort bridging home and school: factors that contribute to multiliteracies development in a yup'ik kindergarten classroom
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8576
geographic Fairbanks
geographic_facet Fairbanks
genre Yup'ik
Alaska
genre_facet Yup'ik
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8576
Linguistics Program
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