Skip to Content Skip to Navigation

CEHD Wordmark - Print Version

Curriculum and Instruction
125 Peik Hall
159 Pillsbury Drive SE
Minneapolis, MN 55455
Voice: 612-625-4006
Fax: 612-624-8277

 

Second languages and cultures - Ph.D.

The Ph.D. track in Second Languages and Cultures (SLC) Education is one of ten tracks in the Ph.D. program in Education, Curriculum and Instruction. It focuses on the study of language use, teaching, learning, and policy across a range of educational and community settings, including programs that serve language minority and language majority learners: ESL/EFL, foreign language education, and bilingual and immersion education. The Ph.D. program is designed to prepare scholars to engage in thoughtful research in the field of language education in order to assume roles as university faculty members, researchers, policy makers, and educational leaders and to make significant and meaningful contributions to the field. Independent scholarship is the cornerstone of our Ph.D. program.

SLC Ph.D. Curricular Strands

The SLC Ph.D. track has four specializations or strands that correspond to our primary focus areas and faculty expertise. Students plan coursework within these strands in consultation with their adviser. Prospective students are encouraged to identify one of these strands as an emphasis during application and to discuss in their statements of purpose how their interests intersect with one or possibly more of these areas. They are also encouraged to read faculty members’ research publications prior to application to have a better sense of work in these areas.

Second Language Acquisition and Classroom Discourse research examines language learning processes and the way language is used by learners and their interlocutors in or out of school. Research in this area might address individual learner factors in language acquisition; or how classroom language use mediates acquisition of language or academic content; how individuals negotiate for meaning in a second language; how teachers and learners provide and understand corrective feedback; or how learners code-switch or code-mix for a variety of purposes.

Sample faculty projects related to this strand:

Literacy and second language oral language processing
This project examines the role of literacy (L1 or L2) among Somali adolescents and young adults in their oral language processing of English. The methodological approach for this project is largely quantitative and includes analyses of one-on-one interactions involving recasts, oral narratives, and elicited imitation tasks. (Martha Bigelow with Elaine Tarone and Kit Hansen)

Oral proficiency development of K-8 Spanish immersion students
This study involves four early, total Spanish immersion programs and is designed to examine Spanish oral language proficiency levels for native English-speaking Kindergarten, Gr. 2, Gr. 5, and Gr. 8 students. Using CAL’s SOPA (Student Oral Proficiency Assessment) and COPE (CAL Oral Proficiency Exam), this quantitative study evaluates oral proficiency test results in the areas of fluency, grammar, vocabulary and listening comprehension across the four programs. (Diane Tedick with Tara Fortune)

Sample dissertations related to this strand:

Tara W. Fortune (2001) Understanding Immersion Students’ Oral Language Use as Mediator of Social Interaction in the Classroom.

Noriko Ishihara (2006) Pragmatics in Second/foreign Language Education: Subjectivity and Pragmatics Instruction.

Pamela M. Wesely (2009) The Language Learning Motivation of Early Adolescent French and Spanish Elementary Immersion Program Graduates.

Second Language Pedagogy and Teacher Development research examines teachers’ classroom practices and strategies as well as professional identities, experiences and attitudes. Broadly speaking, this work seeks to better understand how best to promote effective preparation and professional development for language teachers or content teachers who work with language minority and/or language majority learners.

Sample faculty projects related to this strand:

Immersion teachers’ lived experience of balancing content and language
This phenomenological study taps into the experience of veteran immersion teachers representing one-way and two-way programs to explore their attempts to attend to both content and language in their instruction. Data sources include phenomenological interviews and written “Lived Experience Descriptions.” (Diane Tedick with Laurent marata)

How effective staff development is determined by school cultures
Supported by the US Department of Education, this project examines how individual school cultures influence the likelihood of change being made in the instructional workings of elementary and middle schools serving English language learners. Working with small teams at eight different elementary schools and four middle schools provides unique insight into the workings of leadership, personalities, attitudes, and predispositions to addressing the language and academic content needs of English language learners. (Constance Walker with Tina Edstam and Karla Stone)

Collaboration with Edison High School’s English as a second language department
Supported by a President’s Educational Discrepancies Award, this project aims to develop a mutually-beneficial collaboration between Edison Senior High School’s ESL Department and the SLC program. Funds support activities that help Edison’s ESL Department to reach its goals for better serving language minority youth and to establish a strong relationship with the University that would bring students and staff into this dynamic urban high school for learning, professional development, and research. (Martha Bigelow with Adam Rambow)

Sample dissertations related to this strand:

Kasia Brzosko-Barratt (2007) Experiences of Student Teachers and Cooperating Teachers in ESL: A Phenomenological Study .

Laurent Cammarata (2006) Understanding and Implementing Content-Based Instruction: An Exploration of Foreign Language Teachers' Lived Experience.

Anne Dahlman (2005) Exploration of Second Language Preservice Teachers’ Cognition and Learning.

Kimberly Johnson (2006) The Language of Attitudes: Technical College Faculty and Talk about Diversity.

Language Policy research involves analysis of the formation, implementation, and negotiation of language policy in national, school, community, and private spheres. Research in this area might address topics such as how federal policies are interpreted and enacted by ESL, FL or bilingual teachers or how language policy formation is shaped by language ideologies, political developments and demographic changes in a variety of contexts.

Sample faculty projects related to this strand:

Language policy in bilingual families
This project investigates how parents explain, frame and defend their particular family language policies. We focus here on 24 families who are attempting to achieve additive Spanish/English bilingualism for their children and explore how parents make these decisions; how parents position themselves relative to ‘expert’ advice and other members of their extended families; and how these decisions are linked to their identities as ‘good’ parents. (Kendall King with Lyn Fogle)

Limited formal schooling and the Equal Educational Opportunity Act
This project explores how language and education policies and practices contribute to structural barriers to education for immigrant and refugee youth with limited formal schooling (ELL-LFS). Structural barriers may also be the result of seeing ELL-LFS youth through lenses of discrimination and deficit. This qualitative research uses discourse analysis to uncover how youth and their families are characterized in ways that lead to denying them access to educational opportunities. (Martha Bigelow)

Sample dissertations related to this strand:

Diana Dudzik (2008) English Policies, Curricular Reforms, and Teacher Development in Multilingual, Postcolonial Djibouti.

Paul Magnuson (2003) The Interplay Between Minnesota’s Accountability System and Adolescent English Language Learners with Limited Formal Schooling.

Karla Stone (2008) Making Sense of Testing: English Language Learners and Statewide Assessment.

Languages and Cultures Across Schools and Communities research examines connections across homes, schools and communities with an emphasis on the experiences of language learning communities in the U.S. and abroad. Students active in this area explore how ethnicity, identity, ideology, power, programmatic issues, language use, and the dynamic of cross-cultural communication intersect with language learning, academic achievement and the home-school connection.

Sample faculty projects related to this strand:

The production and experience of (il)legality, language learning, and academic engagement among adolescent transmigrants
This project examines how (il)legality is experienced and (re)produced by adolescents who are simultaneously learning English and attending U.S. schools. Using ethnographic methods, this study aims to analyze how immigration law structures and shapes the language learning and academic experiences of Ecuadorian adolescents in Minneapolis. (Kendall King)

The construction of racialized identities of Somali youth
This project, supported by a President’s Multicultural Research Award, explores how the construct of race frames many inter- and intra-ethnic relationships for Somali youth in school, at home and in the community. Data from observations and interviews with teens and adults are both part of this qualitative research. (Martha Bigelow)

One-way Spanish immersion and English learners: Match or mismatch?
This mixed methods study is designed to explore how Latino, Spanish-dominant children designated as English learners are faring in a one-way, elementary Spanish immersion program originally designed to serve native English-speaking students. Data include analysis of standardized achievement test scores (reading and math) as well as classroom observations, focus groups with teachers and parents, and interviews with program administrators. (Diane Tedick with Tara Fortune)

Sample dissertations related to this strand:

Letitia Basford (2008) From Mainstream to East African Charter: East African Muslim Students’ Experiences in U.S. Schools.

Maria Jesus Plaza Chapa (1999) Language and Cultural Identity in Catalonia: Evidence from Students Having Different Language Backgrounds in Vocational and Secondary Public Schools.

Chui Kian Smidt (2007) Race, Class, and Gender: Immigrant Identity in an ESL College Writing Class.

Faculty

Martha Bigelow
My primary research focus is on the language learning, academic progress, and cultural adaptation of adolescent immigrant/refugee youth, including the education policies and pedagogical practices that serve as barriers to their success.

Tara Fortune (affiliate member)
My research, teaching and professional outreach targets the program design and implementation needs of dual language and immersion educators. Current interests include struggling learners and character-based literacy development in immersion classrooms.

Kendall King
My research encompasses ideological, interactional and policy perspectives on second language learning and bilingualism, with particular attention to educational practices impacting language use among minority populations in Latin America and Spanish speakers in the U.S.

Elaine Tarone (affiliate member)
My variationist research on second language acquisition focuses on the description of the forms and functions of learner language, and the way learner language forms shift in relationship to social contextual factors such as interlocutor role and identity, task and topic.

Diane Tedick
My research interests focus on student language development and the pedagogy required for the successful integration of language and content instruction, particularly in dual language and immersion contexts.

Constance Walker
I have a longstanding interest in the schooling experiences of second language learners. My research interests include the identification of collaborative practices among school personnel that can best enhance students’ language development and academic content learning.

Course requirements

Required coursework for the Ph.D. in education, curriculum and instruction.
Track: second languages and cultures education

Major requirements: A minimum of 24 credits as specified below.

  • Curriculum and instruction core courses
    • CI 8131—Critical Examination of Curriculum in Context (3 cr)
    • CI 8132—Teaching Theory and Research (3 cr)
    • CI 8133—Research Methods in Curriculum and Instruction (3 cr)
  • Track-specific requirements (consult adviser for additional requirements corresponding to identified strand of interest) The following two courses provide for a year-long research experience that is pivotal to the Ph.D. program. The sequence is offered every other year beginning in even years (e.g., 08-09, 10-11, 12-13, etc.) and is typically taken in the student’s third year of coursework (prior to or concurrently with the preliminary examination).
    • CI 8161—Research I: Design & Planning (3 cr)
    • CI 8162—Research II: Analysis & Manuscript Preparation (3 cr)

Research methodology: minimum of 12 credits as specified below.

  • Required courses in quantitative methodology (minimum of 6 credits)
    • EPSY 5261 & 5262 or EPSY 8261 & 8262 (consult adviser)
  • Required courses in qualitative methodology (minimum of 6 credits)

Educational foundations: minimum of 6 credits.

  • In consultation with adviser(s), students choose courses in at least two of five areas: cultural, historical, philosophical, psychological, or sociological foundations.
  • List of educational foundations courses

Minor or supporting program: minimum of 12 credits.

  • All coursework in the minor or supporting program is to be selected in consultation with adviser(s).

Pre-thesis and thesis credits: A minimum of 24 semester thesis credits.

Total: A minimum of 78 semester credits.

See also: Ph.D. student resources.

Alumni in action

Laurent CammarataLaurent Cammarata, Ph.D.

Assistant professor
College of Education
Department of Language and Literacy Education
The University of Georgia

My experience in the SLC program has well exceeded my original expectations and has stimulated my intellectual growth in ways that such a short description would not allow me to truly do justice to. Suffice it to say that I am incredibly grateful for the relentless dedication of its faculty members whose support and visions have constantly inspired me to excel and reach beyond my original expectations. At this point of my student life, I can honestly say that being enrolled in this program has been a transformative experience that has given me the strength and confidence to move forward and make my educational dreams a reality.

Tara FortuneTara Fortune, Ph.D.

Immersion projects coordinator
Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition
University of Minnesota

As an individual with a longstanding passion for language and culture learning, pursuing graduate studies in the SLC program was life-changing. The professionalism and mentoring of faculty, flexible albeit rigorous course program, and sustained financial support through teaching and research assistantships, fellowships, scholarship opportunities all contributed to making the Ph.D. experience very rewarding. My education also opened the door to the exciting professional career in the field that I now enjoy.

Noriko IshiharaNoriko Ishihara, Ph.D.

Associate professor of EFL
Faculty of Business Administration
Hosei University, Tokyo, Japan

During the five years I was enrolled as a student, the SLC doctoral program provided me with various opportunities that were pivotal in helping me succeed in my future career as a researcher, teacher, and teacher educator. I particularly appreciated the dedication and the mentorship of the faculty, the opportunities I was given to teach in the program, and the financial support for writing my doctoral dissertation and attending professional conferences, which was provided by the university’s Graduate School and C&I. The cultural diversity among my fellow students was also a wonderful feature of the program that I always valued.

Pamela M.  WeselyPamela M. Wesely, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor Foreign Language and ESL Education
Department of Teaching and Learning
University of Iowa

The opportunities provided to me during my graduate studies in the SLC program enriched me and prepared me infinitely well for a career in academe. Not only did my coursework help me to become familiar with influential concepts and research procedures in foreign language and ESL education scholarship, but my assistantships and service work opportunities helped me to become a well-rounded novice scholar and academic. The exceptional faculty guided, educated, and supported me in my pursuit of grants, fellowships, and jobs as I proceeded through the program. I am proud to be a graduate of the University of Minnesota’s SLC doctoral program.

Revised September 2009

Return to top