James Crawford's
Language Policy Web Site
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Emporium
Featured Articles
Loose Ends in a Tattered Fabric:
The Inconsistency of Language Rights in the United States
NCLB: A Diminished Vision of Civil Rights
Education Week, June 6, 2007
Welcome
I am a writer and lecturer – formerly the Washington
editor of Education Week
– who specializes in the politics of language. Since 1985, I have
been reporting on the English Only movement,
English Plus, bilingual
education, Native American language revitalization,
and language rights in the U.S.A. From June 2004 to February 2006, I served as executive director of the National Association for Bilingual Education. Click here to read about my unplanned departure from the organization. Click here for my short bio.
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Books
by James Crawford
 
Advocating for English Learners: 
Selected Essays by James Crawford
(Multilingual Matters, 2008)
HOW TO ORDER
English Learners in American Classrooms 
101 Questions, 101 Answers
By James Crawford and Stephen Krashen
(Scholastic, 2007)
HOW TO ORDER
Educating English Learners:
Language Diversity in the Classroom
5th Edition
(formerly Bilingual Education:
History, Politics, Theory and Practice;
Bilingual Educational Services, 2004)
HOW TO ORDER
Online Resource Guide, Ver. 5.1

Companion CD to Educating English Learners
Updated for 2006-07
HOW TO ORDER
At War with Diversity:
U.S. Language Policy in an Age of
Anxiety
(Multilingual Matters, 2000)
HOW TO ORDER
Hold Your Tongue:
Bilingualism and the Politics of English
Only
(Addison-Wesley, 1992) *** STILL IN PRINT!!! ***
HOW TO ORDER
Language Loyalties:
A Source Book on the Official English
Controversy
(University of Chicago Press, 1992)
HOW TO ORDER
Recent
Papers, Speeches, and Articles by James Crawford
Loose Ends in a Tattered Fabric:
The Inconsistency of Language Rights in the United States Forthcoming in J. Magnet, Ed., Language Rights in Comparative Perspective, LexisNexis
Butterworths.
No Child Left Behind: A Diminished Vision of Civil Rights
Commentary for Education Week, 6 June 2007.
The Decline of Bilingual Education: How To Reverse a Troubling Trend?
Article in the International Multilingual Research Journal (2007).
Official English Legislation: Bad for Civil Rights, Bad for America's Interests, and Even Bad For English
Testimony before the House Subcommittee on Education Reform, 26 July 2006.
No Child Left Behind: Misguided Approach to School Accountability for ELLs
Presentation at a forum sponsored by the Center on Education Policy, September 2004.
Numbers Game:
Challenging the Fallacies about Proposition 227
The Bilingual Family Newsletter,
Summer 2003. Raw test scores are no substitute for controlled scientific
studies.
Hard Sell:
Why Is Bilingual Education So Unpopular with the American Public?
Education Policy Studies Laboratory
(Arizona State University). Advocates for bilingual education need
to rethink their assumptions and strategies in opposing English-only
mandates. Otherwise they should expect to suffer more disastrous defeats.
Agenda for
Inaction: A Critique of the National Research Council Report Improving
Schooling for Language-Minority Children
International Journal of
the Sociology of Language 155/156 (2002). Researchers in bilingual
education can – and should – be political without
becoming politicized.
La Educación
Bilingüe en Estados Unidos: Política versus Pedagogía
Paper presented at I Jornadas Internacionales
de Educación Plurilingüe, Ayuntamiento de Vitoria-Gasteiz,
País Vasco, España, 20 November 2001. Translation into
Spanish by Teresa Fernández Ulloa.
Making Sense
of Census 2000
Education Policy Studies Laboratory
(Arizona State University). Recently released data illustrates the
linguistic diversity brought on by immigration. Unfortunately, the
Census tells only half the story because of the way it surveys Americans
on language usage.
Obituary:
The Bilingual Education Act, 1968-2002
The No Child Left Behind Act dismantles the federal Title VII
program and turns most funding decisions over to the states. The word
bilingual has been expunged from the new law, along with
the goal of proficiency in two languages. All this happened with
barely a peep from the traditional political allies of bilingual
education.
Guide
to Title III of the No Child Left Behind Act
ESEA Implementation Guide (2002). A summary of the arcane details of the new education
law relating to English language learners (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader). Part of a comprehensive
handbook on the legislation published by the Title I Report newsletter.
"Accountability"
Versus Science in the Bilingual Education Debate
Education Policy Studies Laboratory
(Arizona State University). Claims and counterclaims about Stanford
9 achievement test scores in California prove nothing about the impact
of Proposition 227, pro or con. What they do show is how misleading "accountability"
measures can be when crudely applied to English language learners.
A
Nation Divided by One Language
Guardian Weekly (UK),
8 March 2001. Explanation for European readers of why so many Americans
are monolingual, and proud of it.
Bilingual Education:
Strike Two
Rethinking Schools,
15, no. 2, Winter 2000/2001. Arizona voters follow California's lead
and mandate English Only programs.
Boom to Bust: Official English in the 1990s
From At War with Diversity: U.S. Language Policy in an Age of Anxiety (2000).
Heritage Languages
in America: Tapping a "Hidden" Resource
Article on the contradictions of
U.S. language policy, October 1999.
Life in a Politicized
Climate: What Role for Educational Researchers?
Speech to the Linguistic Minority
Research Institute, Conference on the Schooling of English Language
Learners in the Post 227 Era, 14 May 1999.
The
Campaign Against Proposition 227: A Post Mortem
Bilingual Research Journal
21, no. 1. Analysis of California's anti-bilingual initiative, February
1999.
Ten Common Fallacies
About Bilingual Education
Digest for the ERIC Clearinghouse
on Languages and Linguistics, November 1998.
What Now
for Bilingual Education?
Report on the Prop. 227 campaign
and its aftermath. Rethinking Schools, Winter 1998/99.
Does Bilingual
Ed Work?
Thumbnail sketch of the relevant
research. Rethinking Schools, Winter 1998/99.
The Bilingual
Education Story: Why Can't the News Media Get It Right?
Critique of press coverage in the
Prop. 227 campaign, presented to the National Association of Hispanic
Journalists, 26 June 1998.
Language
Politics in the U.S.A.: The Paradox of Bilingual Education
Social Justice 25,
no 3 (Fall 1998). Reprinted in Carlos Ovando and Peter McLaren, eds.,
The Politics of Multiculturalism and Bilingual Education:
Students and Teachers Caught in the Cross-Fire, (McGraw-Hill,
2000).
Best
Evidence: Research Foundations of the Bilingual Education Act
Special Report for the National
Clearinghouse on Bilingual Education, March 1997.
Surviving
the English Only Assault: Public Attitudes and the Future of Language
Education
Speech to the Michigan Teachers
of English to Speakers of Other Languages, 16 November 1996.
Legislating
Language, Mandating Inequality
Article in The WorldPaper,
special issue on language policy, July 1996.
Anatomy of
the English Only Movement: Social and Ideological Sources of Language
Restrictionism in the United States
Paper presented at a Conference
on Language Legislation and Linguistic Rights, University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign, 21 March 1996.
Summing up
the Lau Decision: Justice Is Never Simple
Overview article for the proceedings
of a national symposium, Revisiting the Lau Decision: 20 Years
Later (Oakland, Calif.: ARC Associates, 1996).
Seven
Hypotheses on Language Loss: Causes and Cures
In Stabilizing Indigenous
Languages, ed. Gina Cantoni (Flagstaff: Center for Excellence
in Education, Northern Arizona University, 1996).
Endangered Native
American Languages: What Is to Be Done, and Why?
Revised version of an article in
the Bilingual Research Journal, special issue
on Indigenous Language Education and Literacy, vol. 19, no. 1 (Winter
1995).
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Initiative in Arizona | Prop.
227 | Life
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Last updated on 27 April 2008
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