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This innovative, much-needed book shares powerful wisdom and practical strategies to help language teachers, teacher educators and peace educators communicate peace, contribute to peace and weave peacebuilding into classrooms and daily life. The clear, six-part Language of Peace Approach underlies more than 50 creative activities that can promote peacebuilding competence in secondary and post-secondary students, current and prospective educators and community members outside of academia. Chapters span the spectrum from cross-cultural peace education to the positive psychology of peace, from nonverbal peace language to transformative language teaching for peace, and from the needs of language learners to the needs of language educators. The book makes a unique and valuable contribution to the discussion of how we can live together peacefully in a changing world.
This innovative, much-needed book shares powerful wisdom and practical strategies to help language teachers, teacher educators and peace educators communicate peace, contribute to peace and weave peacebuilding into classrooms and daily life. The clear, six-part Language of Peace Approach underlies more than 50 creative activities that can promote peacebuilding competence in secondary and post-secondary students, current and prospective educators and community members outside of academia. Chapters span the spectrum from cross-cultural peace education to the positive psychology of peace, from nonverbal peace language to transformative language teaching for peace, and from the needs of language learners to the needs of language educators. The book makes a unique and valuable contribution to the discussion of how we can live together peacefully in a changing world.
Foreword. Gregory Hadley
Introduction. Melinda Harrison
Section I Language Education Responds to the Call for Peace
Chapter 1. Rebecca L. Oxford, Tammy Gregersen, Melinda Harrison and M. Matilde Olivero: The Call for Peace in Language Education: This Book's Purpose, Themes and Peace Approach
Chapter 2. Christina Gkonou, M. Matilde Olivero and Rebecca L. Oxford: Empowering Language Teachers to be Influential Peacebuilders: Knowledge, Competencies and Activities
Chapter 3. Tammy Gregersen and Peter D. MacIntyre: The Nonverbal Channels of Peacebuilding: What Teachers, Trainers and Facilitators Need to Know
Section II Applying Peacebuilding for Inner, Interpersonal and Intergroup Peace
Chapter 4. María Celina Barbeito and Adelina Sánchez Centeno: Inner Peace and Emotion Regulation During Oral Production in ESL/EFL Teacher Education
Chapter 5. Carmen M. Amerstorfer: How Increased Self-regulation, Learner Autonomy and Learner Cooperation Raise Self-esteem and Consequently Inner Peace and Interpersonal Peace: Insights from an Innovative School Context
Chapter 6. Ana María F. Barcelos: Revolutionary Love and Peace in the Construction of an English Teacher’s Professional Identity
Chapter 7. Josephine Prado, Gönül Uguralp-Cannon, John Marc Green, Melinda Harrison and Laurie Franz Smith: Seeking Connection through Difference: Finding the Nexus of Transformative Learning, Peacebuilding and Language Teaching
Section III Applying Peacebuilding for Intercultural and International Peace
Chapter 8: James E. Bernhardt, Christine M. Campbell and Betty Lou Leaver: Can Foreign Languages Be Taught for Peace at U.S. Government Institutes?
Chapter 9. Michael Wei and Yalun Zhou: International Faculty and International Students in Universities: Their Roles in Fostering Peace across Languages and Cultures
Chapter 10. Laura Mahalingappa, Terri L. Rodriguez and Nihat Polat: Promoting Peace through Social Justice Pedagogies for Students from Immigrant Muslim Communities: Using Critical Language Awareness in Second Language Classrooms
Section IV Applying Peacebuilding through Positive Psychology, Peace Linguistics and Peace Language
Chapter 11. Tammy Gregersen and Peter D. MacIntyre: Acting Locally to Integrate Positive Psychology and Peace: Practical Applications for Language Teaching and Learning
Chapter 12. Rebecca L. Oxford: From Hate Speech to Empathy: Lessons for Language Educators and Society
Chapter 13. Andy Curtis and Rebecca L. Oxford: Applying Peace Linguistics: What Peacebuilders Can Learn from the Languages of Hurt, Hate and Harm
Chapter 14. Rebecca L. Oxford and Andy Curtis: Exploring Peace Language: Hope, Help and Harmony
Section V Moving Further with Peacebuilding
Chapter 15. M. Matilde Olivero, Melinda Harrison and Rebecca L. Oxford: Peacebuilding through Classroom Activities: Inner, Interpersonal, Intergroup, Intercultural, International and Ecological Peace
Chapter 16. M. Matilde Olivero, Tammy Gregersen, Melinda Harrison and Rebecca L. Oxford: Conclusion: Integrating Peace Concepts, Personal Insights and Future Peace Directions
Index
Demonstrates how educators can promote peaceful communication across language groups and cultures
Rebecca L. Oxford is a University of Maryland Professor Emerita and Distinguished Scholar-Teacher who now works with doctoral students at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA.
María Matilde Olivero is a second language teacher educator and researcher at Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, Argentina.
Melinda Harrison is a lecturer at Auburn University at Montgomery, Alabama, USA and is working on a PhD in Educational Studies in Diverse Populations at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Tammy Gregersen is a Professor of TESOL at the American University of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.
This rich collection’s biggest strength is that it provides an
excellent balance between theoretical analysis on the one hand, and
practical implications on the other. The rich ideas and activities
that are suggested will be immensely valuable to teachers who wish
to expand their repertoire of instruction through taking into
serious consideration multiple aspects of peace that are not
limited to the inner self but expand to cover intercultural and
international aspects.
*Michalinos Zembylas, Open University of Cyprus and Nelson Mandela
University, South Africa*
Language can incite hate, hurt and harm; it can also cultivate
love, empathy and respect. This timely book shares powerful wisdom
and practical strategies for how language teachers and other
educators can communicate peace; contribute to building inner,
interpersonal, intergroup, intercultural, international and
ecological peace; weave peacebuilding into instruction and daily
life; and enhance their teaching, learning and being.
*Jing Lin, University of Maryland, USA*
This volume constitutes an impressive effort by international
scholars aligned on the vision of the ripple effect, whereby
notions of peace are integrated into the teaching and learning of
languages. The book deals with peace in its various manifestations
and demonstrates how beyond speech and writing, nonverbal
communication also has a role to play in creating an environment in
which peace can flourish.
*Andrew D. Cohen, Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota,
USA*
This book is most timely during the sociopolitical turmoil of a
worldwide pandemic, massive refugee migrations and displacement,
environmental and economic disasters, and collapse of peace efforts
on the world stage. Readable and insightful, the volume offers hope
and concrete peacebuilding strategies and models steps that
language educators and students will embrace. This is a jewel of a
book and a labor of love realized.
*Martha Nyikos, Indiana University, USA*
This is an uplifting collection for our challenging times. It
brings together scholars with the courage to mobilise their
longstanding scholarship in language education, diverse talents in
arts and activism, and deep commitment to their communities to
offer a strong vision for a peaceful, just and sustainable society.
The book challenges us all to renew our resolve to use our language
education inquiry and practice to contribute to his
project.
*Maggie Kubanyiova, University of Leeds, UK*
This inspiring volume transcends geographical borders as it offers
the reader an international perspective on peacebuilding in
language education contexts. The ideas presented in this book
represent a rich resource for teacher educators interested in
developing a culture of peace as it highlights the contribution of
differences to peacebuilding. Through this collection ripples of
peace will indeed be felt all around the world.
*Pamela Gunning, Concordia University, Canada*
If ever the world needed peace it is surely now, and a book such as
this is therefore certainly timely with its message of tolerance,
understanding, empathy and nonviolence. Language teachers are in a
unique position to promote more positive and peaceful mindsets,
since we work and travel with people around the globe who may be
influenced by our words and actions.
*Carol Griffiths, Girne American University of North Cyprus*
At a time of great sociopolitical tension globally, this volume is
a beacon of light for understanding and reconciliation. From
practical activities to the overarching state of mind this book
instills, language educators are given the tools to build peace
both with and within their students. This book involves the
burgeoning fields of positive psychology, peace education, and
language education but does not simply follow previous footsteps;
instead, it carves a unique path from which any reader could
benefit.
*Nathan Thomas, UCL Institute of Education, London, UK*
Is there any better way to teach peace than by normalizing it as
part of everyday human experience, communication, and expression,
as this book does? Peacebuilding in Language Education is a
much-needed corrective to too much peace education that starts with
the a priori assumption that peace is some lofty, hard-to-reach
ideological good rather than the presumed norm for human community
and thriving.
*Nicole Johnson, University of Mount Union, Ohio, USA*
The integration of discussions on peace in education is paramount
to positively shaping the minds of future generations, especially
in times of personal, political and social uncertainty. In this
very timely book, the editors have brought together a collection of
profound papers that explore ways in which language educators can
weave explorations of peacebuilding into their classrooms and
curricula.
*Heath Rose, University of Oxford, UK*
This book highlights the deep link between language education and
culture, which is mostly overlooked in favour of the obvious parts
of the "culture iceberg". In our highly turbulent and uncertain
times, this volume constitutes a powerful statement that language
educators need to raise learner awareness of the power of
words.
*Zoe Kantaridou, University of Macedonia, Greece; Hellenic Open
University, Greece*
As can be seen, the activities [in the book] are adaptable both to
in-class and online teaching and the lesson
plans alone are worth the price of the book. Overall, this is a
very rich book addressing personal attitudes, theory and practice
in a more open approach to language teaching and learning and a
valuable addition to university, teacher training and teachers'
libraries.
*Training, Language and Culture, Volume 4 Issue 4, 2020*
This volume is a tremendous read which offers a refreshing,
creative, eye-opening perspective on what we as teachers can do in
the L2/foreign language classroom to contribute responsibly to the
world around us, even beyond our immediate zones of action. It also
appeals to us as individual human beings. The moving stories of
Ghanaian and South Sudanese children that conclude the volume
validate the need for volumes of this kind. Give peace education a
chance.
*ELT Journal, 2021*
Readers will certainly walk away from this book with an
understanding that teaching language is intricately linked to
peacebuilding efforts, from helping language teachers to find inner
peace to encouraging meaningful discussions in diverse classrooms.
This book has the potential to inspire and empower even the
humblest of language teachers to accept the peacebuilder’s
call.
*Teachers College Record, August 2021*
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