Authors
Adriana Alvarez
Publication date
2020/10/1
Journal
Equity & Excellence in Education
Volume
53
Issue
4
Pages
482-503
Publisher
Routledge
Description
This qualitative case study examined the creation process and final artifacts of two biliteracy family projects that children and families from Mexican immigrant backgrounds collaboratively created as part of classroom instruction. Data were collected during five months in a first grade bilingual classroom with 22 students and centered on six focal families. The theoretical lenses of critical race theory and community cultural wealth served to analyze how biliteracy family projects facilitate the integration of children and families’ experiential knowledge in a bilingual classroom and how such experiential knowledge emerges as forms of capital in the final products and during the creation process. Findings highlight how children’s experiential knowledge and culturally simultaneous identities appeared through a collaborative process, and how parents facilitated and negotiated their children’s cultural simultaneity as forms of …
Total citations
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