Ohio State nav bar

Crossing Borders: Pedagogical Possibilities for Cultivating a Translingual and Transcultural World

Marjorie Faulstich Orellana
March 8, 2016
12:00PM - 1:00PM
115 Mendenhall

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2016-03-08 12:00:00 2016-03-08 13:00:00 Crossing Borders: Pedagogical Possibilities for Cultivating a Translingual and Transcultural World Time: 5 p.m. Event Host: Latino/a Studies Program Short Description: This talk takes us into the heart of "B-Club," an after-school program that brings together the children of immigrants from diverse countries (principally Mexico and Central America) to learn and play together with undergraduate students from diverse linguistic and cultural backgrounds. This talk takes us into the heart of "B-Club," an after-school program that brings together the children of immigrants from diverse countries (principally Mexico and Central America) to learn and play together with undergraduate students from diverse linguistic and cultural backgrounds. Orellana examine the ways in which participants both policed and crossed linguistic and cultural borders, and the translingual and transcultural competencies that were cultivated in this space. She uses this space to reconsider language issues in bilingual and multilingual communities from a "translanguaging" perspective (García, 2009) and to imagine pedagogical possibilities for cultivating and sustaining a transcultural world.Marjorie Faulstich Orellana is Professor of Urban Schooling at UCLA, where she also serves as the associate director of the Center for International Migration, and co-director of Faculty for the Teacher Education Program. Her first book, Translating Childhoods: Immigrant Youth, Language and Culture, examines the work that the children of immigrants do as language and cultural brokers. Her new (2015) book, Immigrant Children in Transcultural Spaces: Language, Learning and Love, examines children's perspectives on linguistic, cultural and other borders as they interact in a transcultural, play-based afterschool program.Sponsored by: OSU Latina/o Studies Program, the Department of Teaching and Learning, Crane Center for Early Childhood Research and Policy, and the Department of Spanish and Portuguese 115 Mendenhall College of Arts and Sciences asccomm@osu.edu America/New_York public
Time: 5 p.m.
Event Host: Latino/a Studies Program
Short Description: This talk takes us into the heart of "B-Club," an after-school program that brings together the children of immigrants from diverse countries (principally Mexico and Central America) to learn and play together with undergraduate students from diverse linguistic and cultural backgrounds.


This talk takes us into the heart of "B-Club," an after-school program that brings together the children of immigrants from diverse countries (principally Mexico and Central America) to learn and play together with undergraduate students from diverse linguistic and cultural backgrounds. Orellana examine the ways in which participants both policed and crossed linguistic and cultural borders, and the translingual and transcultural competencies that were cultivated in this space. She uses this space to reconsider language issues in bilingual and multilingual communities from a "translanguaging" perspective (García, 2009) and to imagine pedagogical possibilities for cultivating and sustaining a transcultural world.

Marjorie Faulstich Orellana is Professor of Urban Schooling at UCLA, where she also serves as the associate director of the Center for International Migration, and co-director of Faculty for the Teacher Education Program. Her first book, Translating Childhoods: Immigrant Youth, Language and Culture, examines the work that the children of immigrants do as language and cultural brokers. Her new (2015) book, Immigrant Children in Transcultural Spaces: Language, Learning and Love, examines children's perspectives on linguistic, cultural and other borders as they interact in a transcultural, play-based afterschool program.

Sponsored by: OSU Latina/o Studies Program, the Department of Teaching and Learning, Crane Center for Early Childhood Research and Policy, and the Department of Spanish and Portuguese

Events Filters: