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Faculty of Education » Home » Denise Blanch Zelada’s MA Thesis Defence

Denise Blanch Zelada’s MA Thesis Defence

Denise Blanch Zelada will be defending her MA thesis at 11:30 am (Pacific Time) on Monday, December 14th virtually via Zoom.

All are welcome to attend.

Join Zoom Meeting (please arrive 5 minutes early)
Meeting ID: 646 1679 8106
Passcode: 755529


Supervisory Committee:
Dr. Margaret Early (research supervisor), Dr. Maureen Kendrick and Dr. Kathryn Accurso


Title: Supporting Refugee and Migrant Background Students in a Canadian Elementary Classroom: Challenges and Promising Teaching Practices

Abstract:

Canada has a long history of resettlement of refugee and protected persons, and between 2015 and 2019, over 225,000 were resettled (IRCC, 2020). Many refugee background newcomers to Canada (42%) are school-aged children and youth, including students with limited or interrupted formal education (SLIFE) (IRCC, 2017); many have experienced triple trauma due to forced migration, during transition, and upon resettlement in Canada (Stewart et al. 2019). This lack of opportunity to attend school and traumatic experiences presents daunting challenges for refugee background students and their teachers who may lack resources and preparation to meet their complex needs (Stewart et al., 2019). This study seeks to contribute to better understandings in this area through its exploration of what an expert elementary school educator, together with her team-teaching colleagues, perceived as the challenges and successful approaches to language and literacy education for Grade 6/7 refugee and migrant background students (RMBS). The study also explored the potential of multiliteracies pedagogies to leverage the multimodal communicative repertoires of RMBS, as they engaged in a cross-curricular unit of study in their mainstream Grade 6/7 classroom. The theoretical frameworks drawn from were a socio-cultural perspective of literacy, multiliteracies pedagogy and learning by design, as well as conceptions of identity and investment. Data was gathered through field notes, participant observation, audio recording of classroom interactions, student artifacts and texts, and semi-structured focus groups and teacher interviews. The data collected was inductively and deductively thematically analyzed. Findings illuminated the teaching team of expert educators’ perceptions of the challenges of working with RMBS students, as well as successful educational approaches to support RMBS and enhance their achievement. The findings also contributed to a better understanding of the development of innovative pedagogical practices that engage and enhance these youths’ full communicative repertoires and identities towards academic achievement, social and emotional learning, and literacy engagement.



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