Allophone Students in French Second-Official-Language Programs: A Literature Review
Year:
2007
Author :
Volume and number:
, 63 (5)
Journal:
, The Canadian Modern Language Review / La Revue canadienne des langues vivantes
Pages :
, 727-760
Abstract
In Canada, education in French as a second language (FSL) offers students the opportunity to learn a second official language. Is such an opportunity appropriate for allophone students who are still in the process of learning English? This literature review provides a fourfold consideration of the issue. Section 1 examines the political response by investigating whether Canadian federal policies provide for the inclusion of allophone students in FSL programs. Section 2 provides an overview of provincial policies, specifically examining allophone students' access to FSL. A review of the literature regarding the motivation of allophone students is found in Section 3. Finally, Section 4 details the research on the achievement ofallophone students studying French. Tables, References. Adapted from the source document.
Theme :
EducationLanguage TrainingOfficial languagesNon-official languagesLiterature
Database: This is a bibliographic reference. Please note that the majority of references in our database do not contain full texts.
- To consult references on the health of official‑language minority communities (OLMC): click here