Speaking my Language and Being Beautiful – Decolonizing Indigenous Language Education in the Ryukyus with a Special Reference to Sámi Language Revitalization

The purposes of this research were to investigate the situations of indigenous language teaching and learning and facilitate better ways to embrace multilingualism in indigenous language communities. The specific aims of the study were (1) to investigate two example cases of indigenous language grou...

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Main Author: Hammine, Madoka
Other Authors: fi=Kasvatustieteiden tiedekunta|en=Faculty of Education|
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: fi=Lapin yliopisto|en=University of Lapland| 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lauda.ulapland.fi/handle/10024/64121
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spelling ftunivlapland:oai:lauda.ulapland.fi:10024/64121 2023-05-15T18:14:47+02:00 Speaking my Language and Being Beautiful – Decolonizing Indigenous Language Education in the Ryukyus with a Special Reference to Sámi Language Revitalization Hammine, Madoka fi=Kasvatustieteiden tiedekunta|en=Faculty of Education| 2020 122 https://lauda.ulapland.fi/handle/10024/64121 en eng fi=Lapin yliopisto|en=University of Lapland| Acta electronica Universitatis Lapponiensis 277 1796-6310 978-952-337-194-1 https://lauda.ulapland.fi/handle/10024/64121 URN:ISBN:978-952-337-194-1 cc by-nc-nd 4.0 CC-BY-NC-ND doctoralThesis fi=Väitöskirja|en=Doctoral Thesis| 2020 ftunivlapland 2021-11-11T19:10:59Z The purposes of this research were to investigate the situations of indigenous language teaching and learning and facilitate better ways to embrace multilingualism in indigenous language communities. The specific aims of the study were (1) to investigate two example cases of indigenous language groups in Japan and Finland, (2) to examine voices and experiences of indigenous language teachers and learners and (3) to create possible suggestions for indigenous language teacher education from the two case studies. Three themes were used as the main theoretical frameworks: indigenous teacher identity, language and indigenous education. This study used a participatory, community-based research methodology within a framework of an Indigenous research methodology. The data for this study were collected from two ethnographic fieldworks—conducted in indigenous language communities of both Finland and Japan—through classroom observation, field notes, video recordings, interviews (group, pair and individual), policy documents and linguistic landscape documentation. Altogether, the study involved teachers, new speakers (language learners) and traditional speakers of indigenous languages. In the first sub-study, ten teachers of Sámi languages in Finland were interviewed to find out their approaches and experiences of teaching indigenous languages. The second sub-study examined twelve teachers of the Yaeyama language in the Yaeyama community, new speakers and traditional speakers of the language. The third-sub study of this research focused on the history of indigenous language education in Japan, exploring identity negotiations of Ryukyuan people and their linguistic rights to education. The principal result of this study showed that there is a need to decolonise language education from within. This, in turn, indicated that lack of confidence and self-esteem as teachers (language attitudes), unconscious richness of indigenous language speakers (language practice) and invisible language policy (language management) were the components that needed to be addressed in order to facilitate indigenous language education. This research suggested a new model of decolonising language education from within, which could be implemented in other indigenous language contexts around the world for individuals to be able to speak their language and be “beautiful” at the same time. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Sámi Sámi University of Lapland: Lauda
institution Open Polar
collection University of Lapland: Lauda
op_collection_id ftunivlapland
language English
description The purposes of this research were to investigate the situations of indigenous language teaching and learning and facilitate better ways to embrace multilingualism in indigenous language communities. The specific aims of the study were (1) to investigate two example cases of indigenous language groups in Japan and Finland, (2) to examine voices and experiences of indigenous language teachers and learners and (3) to create possible suggestions for indigenous language teacher education from the two case studies. Three themes were used as the main theoretical frameworks: indigenous teacher identity, language and indigenous education. This study used a participatory, community-based research methodology within a framework of an Indigenous research methodology. The data for this study were collected from two ethnographic fieldworks—conducted in indigenous language communities of both Finland and Japan—through classroom observation, field notes, video recordings, interviews (group, pair and individual), policy documents and linguistic landscape documentation. Altogether, the study involved teachers, new speakers (language learners) and traditional speakers of indigenous languages. In the first sub-study, ten teachers of Sámi languages in Finland were interviewed to find out their approaches and experiences of teaching indigenous languages. The second sub-study examined twelve teachers of the Yaeyama language in the Yaeyama community, new speakers and traditional speakers of the language. The third-sub study of this research focused on the history of indigenous language education in Japan, exploring identity negotiations of Ryukyuan people and their linguistic rights to education. The principal result of this study showed that there is a need to decolonise language education from within. This, in turn, indicated that lack of confidence and self-esteem as teachers (language attitudes), unconscious richness of indigenous language speakers (language practice) and invisible language policy (language management) were the components that needed to be addressed in order to facilitate indigenous language education. This research suggested a new model of decolonising language education from within, which could be implemented in other indigenous language contexts around the world for individuals to be able to speak their language and be “beautiful” at the same time.
author2 fi=Kasvatustieteiden tiedekunta|en=Faculty of Education|
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Hammine, Madoka
spellingShingle Hammine, Madoka
Speaking my Language and Being Beautiful – Decolonizing Indigenous Language Education in the Ryukyus with a Special Reference to Sámi Language Revitalization
author_facet Hammine, Madoka
author_sort Hammine, Madoka
title Speaking my Language and Being Beautiful – Decolonizing Indigenous Language Education in the Ryukyus with a Special Reference to Sámi Language Revitalization
title_short Speaking my Language and Being Beautiful – Decolonizing Indigenous Language Education in the Ryukyus with a Special Reference to Sámi Language Revitalization
title_full Speaking my Language and Being Beautiful – Decolonizing Indigenous Language Education in the Ryukyus with a Special Reference to Sámi Language Revitalization
title_fullStr Speaking my Language and Being Beautiful – Decolonizing Indigenous Language Education in the Ryukyus with a Special Reference to Sámi Language Revitalization
title_full_unstemmed Speaking my Language and Being Beautiful – Decolonizing Indigenous Language Education in the Ryukyus with a Special Reference to Sámi Language Revitalization
title_sort speaking my language and being beautiful – decolonizing indigenous language education in the ryukyus with a special reference to sámi language revitalization
publisher fi=Lapin yliopisto|en=University of Lapland|
publishDate 2020
url https://lauda.ulapland.fi/handle/10024/64121
genre Sámi
Sámi
genre_facet Sámi
Sámi
op_relation Acta electronica Universitatis Lapponiensis
277
1796-6310
978-952-337-194-1
https://lauda.ulapland.fi/handle/10024/64121
URN:ISBN:978-952-337-194-1
op_rights cc by-nc-nd 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
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