2022
DOI: 10.1111/flan.12641
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Gender‐just language teaching and linguistic competence development

Abstract: Within a broad turn toward identity‐focused pedagogies, educators are increasingly recognizing the critical impetus to engage with gender in expansive and inclusive ways. However, challenges persist. Often inadequate supports are exacerbated by a lack of empirical investigations into whether and how gender‐just language teaching may contribute to student learning. Thus, very little is known about how this ethical imperative interfaces with linguistic outcomes. To respond, this study analyzed linguistic accurac… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…As an additional example, Mx. (an honorific that serves as an alternative to Mr. or Mrs.) has been observed in French, alongside avoidance strategies and other lexical items such as mondame (an alternative to monsieur or madame; see Conrod, 2022a;Knisely, 2022d).…”
Section: Putting Trans In Translanguagingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As an additional example, Mx. (an honorific that serves as an alternative to Mr. or Mrs.) has been observed in French, alongside avoidance strategies and other lexical items such as mondame (an alternative to monsieur or madame; see Conrod, 2022a;Knisely, 2022d).…”
Section: Putting Trans In Translanguagingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, in addition to ensuring that we explicitly introduce available options for all of our students to be able to express their identities in the language of study (see, for example, Duarte et al, 2022), our learning objectives, resources and assessment practices should also reflect alignment with liberatory praxis of inclusion (see, Knisely, 2022b, for specific strategies applied in an intermediate French language course). It is also important to consider how to "proactively plan for and respond to resistance" (Knisely, 2022a). Indeed, resistance to such pedagogical practices can be experienced both inside and outside the classroom, in disciplinary and institutional contexts, but also, and perhaps most importantly, it can also be experienced by learners as they interact with members of the given language speaking community.…”
Section: Gesturing Towards More Inclusive Futuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In these spaces, learners can be explicitly and implicitly equipped to agentively negotiate their -potentially fluid, context-sensitive -languaging choices to talk about themselves and others, and to be able to advocate for themselves and others in the process. This may entail integration of examples of non-binary languaging practices and discussion of strategies to avoid and negotiate misgendering in the language of study (Knisely, 2022a). These may be considered emerging pedagogical practices, and may look different across educational contexts, and even from one semester to the next.…”
Section: Gesturing Towards More Inclusive Futuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Knisely's position paper is a valuable reminder to us as language educators to continually question how we conceptualize language, centering trans knowledges and linguistic practices and effecting a paradigm shift away from language‐as‐noun, about which we teach, to language‐as‐verb, in which we participate alongside our students. Using frameworks like trans‐affirming queer inquiry‐based pedagogies (TAQIBPs; Knisely & Paiz, 2021) and drawing on educational resources such as those available through Knisely's (2022) gender‐just language education project are valuable and impactful steps we can take to center trans knowledges and linguacultures in our teaching.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%