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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Khawla Badwan (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK) , Ruth Churchill Dower (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK) , Warda Farah , Rosie Flewitt (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.520kg ISBN: 9781032620756ISBN 10: 1032620757 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 21 August 2025 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviews'This exemplary book goes far beyond simple meanings and interpretations about language, to reconceptualise language as multimodal and embodied in spoken and signed words, created with machines and symbols, danced, painted … and always connected to place. The interdisciplinary authors are academics, pedagogues, located in communities and various practitioners who give us new insights into how children create their own language in their unique learning ecologies and share what this actually looks like in their lifeworlds.' - Nicola Yelland, Professor of Early Childhood Studies, University of Melbourne, Australia. 'If “it takes a village to raise a child,” this book powerfully shows that it is not only the people in the village, but the land, objects, and the whole host of non-human beings there who shape this development. The book demonstrates that language and cognition are embodied, shaped by an ecology of expansive social and material resources. How children draw from all the resources in their environment to think and talk in creative, spontaneous, and unorthodox ways suggests a complex language development. Judging their communication as deficient stems from our limited ideological assumptions. This book educates scholars to expand their perspectives by listening to the more-than-human communication “out of the mouth of babes and infants”!' - Suresh Canagarajah, Evan Pugh University Professor, Pennsylvania State University 'This exemplary book goes far beyond simple meanings and interpretations about language, to reconceptualise language as multimodal and embodied in spoken and signed words, created with machines and symbols, danced, painted … and always connected to place. The interdisciplinary authors are academics, pedagogues, located in communities and various practitioners who give us new insights into how children create their own language in their unique learning ecologies and share what this actually looks like in their lifeworlds.' - Nicola Yelland, Professor of Early Childhood Studies, University of Melbourne, Australia 'If “it takes a village to raise a child,” this book powerfully shows that it is not only the people in the village, but the land, objects, and the whole host of non-human beings there who shape this development. The book demonstrates that language and cognition are embodied, shaped by an ecology of expansive social and material resources. How children draw from all the resources in their environment to think and talk in creative, spontaneous, and unorthodox ways suggests a complex language development. Judging their communication as deficient stems from our limited ideological assumptions. This book educates scholars to expand their perspectives by listening to the more-than-human communication “out of the mouth of babes and infants”!' - Suresh Canagarajah, Evan Pugh University Professor, Pennsylvania State University, USA 'If you are interested in how, why and when children communicate, you will be informed, provoked, stimulated and engaged by this collection of papers. Rejecting simple and reductive approaches, the authors collectively show that children’s languaging practices are full-bodied, material, placed, unpredictable and delightfully opaque and slippery.' - Pat Thomson, Professor of Education, The University of Nottingham, UK Author InformationKhawla Badwan is Reader in TESOL and Applied Linguistics at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. Ruth Churchill Dower is a PhD scholar at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK, exploring young children's nonlingual ways of being through experiments in movement. Warda Farah is a Social Entrepreneur, Speech & Language Therapist, Writer and Consultant. Rosie Flewitt is Professor of Early Childhood Communication at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. Abigail Hackett is a Professor of Childhood and Education at Sheffield Hallam University. Rachel Holmes is a Professor in the Education and Social Research Institute of Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. Christina MacRae is a Visiting Research Fellow at Manchester Metropolitan University. Vishnu KK Nair is a Lecturer in the School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences at University of Reading. David Ben Shannon is a Lecturer in the School of Education at the University of Sheffield. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |