Thumbnail of speaker Fernando Tejedo.

Speaker

Fernando Tejedo

Professor of Spanish

Fernando’s courses in Spanish in the US, dialectology, and language variation and change, regularly include issues of language ideology and language and dialect discrimination. His research combines linguistic and sociohistorical insights to understand how language and sociopolitical ideologies may have a social impact on speakers of minority languages. His current research also lies in the development of standard languages in relation to nationality, social status, language identity, and education.

Speaking in

Understanding and Addressing Linguistic Bias and Discrimination

Day 2: November 15, 2023 | 1:00 p.m. – 2:15 p.m., Breakout Option 4

This breakout session will focus on the concrete ways that language ideologies — attitudes and beliefs about the nature of language and about language variation — can reinforce and perpetuate stereotypes and result in discriminatory practices. The session will introduce a ‘raciolinguistic’ perspective to explore questions such as: What is standard(ized) English and whose language does it (not) represent? What does it mean to have an accent or to think you don’t? How do our beliefs about language influence how we perceive and treat others? What is linguistic discrimination? Participants will examine their own beliefs related to language, linguistic diversity, and language variation, and consider ways in which linguistic ideologies result in discriminatory practices in educational and other settings. Participants in this session will bridge the divide by learning how variation is an inherent characteristic of human language and how racial and other inequities are perpetuated by the stigmatization of certain language varieties. Participants in the session will realize belonging by considering how to identify and address linguistic bias and discrimination in their academic, professional and personal lives by engaging in reflection and in critical discussion with the presenters and one another.