Students’ Orientations Towards Multilingualism and Social Justice in a Swedish-medium University Degree Program in Educational Sciences in Finland

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Abstract

This study focuses on students' orientations towards multilingualism in a Swedish-speaking educational degree program in Finland. Swedish is one of the two national languages in Finland and basic education is provided separately in Finnish and Swedish, even if the current national policies strongly support multilingualism in education. We analyzed the language orientations in the students' coursework (N = 52) in an educational sciences degree program that has an emphasis on multilingualism and social justice. The results showed that multilingual identities and linguistic repertoires were presented as valuable, but the students rarely identified themselves as multilingual. They perceived multilingualism as a resource and a means for inclusion, but concurrently also saw challenges in balancing between protecting the minority language and multilingual practices. The connection between multilingualism and social justice was visible in the students' multiple and sometimes contradicting views, but the texts hardly raised questions of broader language-related societal inequality or discrimination.

Original languageEnglish
Journal Journal of language, identity, and education
Pages (from-to)1-15
Number of pages15
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 10 Feb 2022
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • 516 Educational sciences
  • Language orientations
  • minorities
  • multilingualism
  • social justice
  • teacher education
  • Language orientations
  • minorities
  • multilingualism
  • social justice
  • teacher education
  • FINNISH TEACHERS
  • DISCOURSES

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