Research project Teaching the mother tongue: ideology and organisation
Mother tongue education is a hotly debated, politicised scapegoat for some and a valued opportunity for others. Why are there such strong competing attitudes towards a school subject? This research examines how the organisation of mother tongue education is both a product of, and contributer to, shifting ideologies of language in Sweden.
This project investigates how language ideologies related to mother tongue education emerge and spread. The first part of the project established which ideologies have historically emerged as the most prominent in discourses of mother tongue education. The second examines how mother tongue education is organised and what effect(s) this organisation has on ideology. Mother tongue teachers are coordinated through mother tongue centres, which manage teachers' workloads within any of Sweden's local municipalities where at least five students (or one for national minority languages) are entitled to classes in a particular language.
Existing research within the mother tongue context has not examined the relationship between ideology and the material circumstances of the mother tongue field and there is a lack of research into the organisation of mother tongue education. Furtheremore there is increasing interest in historically grounded ethnographic forms of research in this area.
Project members
Project managers
Scarlett Mannish
Doktorand
