What's up wif Ebonics, Y'all?
Note: After reading this article, please visit the transcript of the discussion forum to view readers' comments.
Abstract
This article examines the controversy surrounding the use of Ebonics among African American students in schools in the United States, with a twofold purpose: (1) to focus on the primary function of language as a tool of communication that varies in its use according to the social context; and (2) to provide suggestions to teachers of ways to support students' acquisition of standard English without devaluing the nonstandard variants they may have learned in their homes and communities. The discussion is highlighted with classroom stories, anecdotes, and vignettes.
The article contains the following sections:
Author Information
Gupta is an assistant professor at the Darden College of Education, Old Dominion University (Norfolk, VA 23529, USA). In addition to teaching graduate courses in reading, language, and literacy, she directs the university's Reading Center and its America Reads Program. She can be reached by e-mail at agupta@odu.edu.
Reading Online, www.readingonline.org
Posted June 1999
© 1999-2000 International Reading Association, Inc. ISSN 1096-1232