英文摘要 |
COVID-19 brought global chaos and unprecedented interruptions at all levels of education. The purpose of this sociolinguistic study is to explore social, cultural, linguistic, and individual factors that may contribute to the development of bilingual-maintenance and bicultural-identity among second-generation Chinese-American language-teachers in California. Bilingual education has progressed for decades in the U.S. but many issues remain. Some of the discussed second-generation Chinese Americans chose careers as elementary-school bilingual teachers. This study examines their Chinese-and-English bilingual-maintenance in a bicultural context in the digitalized world, and seeks to describe which influences led these individuals to re-construct their bicultural-identity in the pandemic era. The researcher developed questionnaires and conducted years of observations and interviews to derive qualitative data from 4 teachers regarding their background, language-acquisition experiences, cultural-identity awareness, information literacy, and teaching issues they faced. Through case studies, we explore how 4 variables --- ‘personality’, ‘socio-demographic’, ‘acculturation’, and ‘contextual-pressures’ causally affect these second-generations, and how they produce versions of identities to support themselves as bilingual teachers. This paper intends to promote understanding and initiate a discussion forum for people interested in the English-V.S.-Chinese bilingual education in the U.S. |