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Who counts as a speaker of a language?

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    People say that a long, long time ago,
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    everybody on earth spoke the same language
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    and belonged to the same tribe.
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    And I guess people had
    a little too much time on their hands,
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    because they decided
    they were going to work together
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    to become as great as God.
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    So they started to build a tower
    up into the heavens.
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    God saw this and was angry,
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    and to punish the people
    for their arrogance,
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    God destroyed the tower
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    and scattered the people
    to the ends of the earth
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    and made them all
    speak different languages.
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    This is the story of the Tower of Babel,
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    and it's probably not
    a literal historical truth,
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    but it does tell us something
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    about the way that we understand
    languages and speakers.
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    So for one thing, we often think
    about speaking different languages
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    as meaning that we don't get along
    or maybe we're in conflict,
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    and speaking the same language as meaning
    that we belong to the same group
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    and that we can work together.
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    Modern linguists know
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    that the relationship between
    language and social categories
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    is intricate and complex,
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    and we bring a lot of baggage
    to the way that we understand language,
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    to the point that even
    a seemingly simple question,
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    like, "What makes a person
    a speaker of a language?"
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    can turn out to be really,
    really complicated.
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    I'm a Spanish professor at Ohio State.
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    I teach mostly upper-level courses,
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    where the students have taken
    four to five years
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    of university-level Spanish courses.
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    So students who are in my class
    speak Spanish with me all semester long.
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    They listen to me speak in Spanish.
    They turn in written work in Spanish.
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    And yet, when I asked my students
    at the beginning of the semester,
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    "Who considers themselves
    a Spanish speaker?"
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    not very many of them raised their hands.
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    So you can be a really,
    really good speaker of a language
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    and still not consider yourself
    a language speaker.
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    Maybe it's not just about
    how well you speak a language.
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    Maybe it's also about what age
    you start learning that language.
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    But when we look at kids
    who speak Spanish at home
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    but mostly English at work or in school,
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    they often feel like they don't
    speak either language really well.
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    They sometimes feel like they exist
    in a state of languagelessness,
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    because they don't feel fully comfortable
    in Spanish at school,
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    and they don't feel fully comfortable
    in English at home.
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    We have this really strong idea
    that in order to be a good bilingual,
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    we have to be two
    monolinguals in one body.
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    But linguists know that's not really
    how bilingualism works.
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    It's actually much more common
    for people to specialize,
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    to use one language in one place
    and another language in another place.
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    Now, it's not always only about
    how we see ourselves.
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    It can also be about
    how other people see us.
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    I do my research in Bolivia,
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    which is a country in South America.
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    And in Bolivia, as in the United States,
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    there are different social groups
    and different ethnic categories.
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    One of those ethnic categories
    is a group known as Quechua,
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    who are Indigenous people.
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    And people who are Quechua
    speak Spanish a little bit differently
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    than your run-of-the-mill Spanish speaker.
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    In particular, there are some sounds
    that sound a little bit more alike
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    when many Quechua speakers use them.
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    So a colleague and I designed a study
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    where we took a series
    of very similar-sounding word pairs,
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    and they were similar-sounding
    in exactly the same sorts of ways
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    that Quechua speakers often sound similar
    when they speak Spanish.
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    We played those similar-sounding
    word pairs to a group of listeners,
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    and we told half of the listeners
    that they were going to listen
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    to just your normal
    run-of-the-mill Spanish speaker,
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    and the other half of the listeners that
    they were going to hear a Quechua speaker.
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    Everybody heard the same recording,
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    but what we found was that people
    who thought they were listening
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    to a run-of-the-mill Spanish speaker
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    made clear differences
    between the word pairs,
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    and people who thought they were
    listening to a Quechua speaker
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    really didn't seem to make
    clear differences.
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    So if a visual would help,
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    here are the results of our study.
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    What you see here in the top line
    is a little bit of an arch.
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    That's what you would expect
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    from people who are making
    clear differences between the word pairs,
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    and that's what you see for people
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    who though they were
    listening to a Spanish speaker.
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    What you see on the bottom
    is a little bit more of a flat line,
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    and that's what we expect to see
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    when people are not
    making clear differences,
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    and that came from the group that thought
    they were listening to a Quechua speaker.
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    Now, since nothing
    about the recording changed,
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    that means that it was the social
    categories that we gave the listeners
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    that changed the way
    they perceived language.
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    This isn't just some funny thing
    that only happens in Bolivia.
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    Research has been carried out
    in the United States,
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    in Canada, in New Zealand,
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    showing exactly the same thing.
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    We incorporate social categories
    into our understanding of language.
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    There have even been studies
    carried out with American college students
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    who listen to a university lecture.
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    Half of the students were shown
    a picture of a Caucasian face
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    as the instructor.
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    Half of the students were shown
    a picture of an Asian face
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    as the instructor.
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    And students who saw the Asian face
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    reported that the lecture was less clear
    and harder to understand,
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    even though everybody listened
    to the same recording.
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    So social categories really influence
    the way that we understand language.
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    And this is an issue that became
    especially personal to me
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    when my children started school.
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    My children are Latino,
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    and we speak Spanish at home,
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    but they speak mostly English
    with their friends out in the world,
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    with their grandparents.
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    When they started school,
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    I was told that the district requires
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    that any household that has a member
    who speaks a language other than English,
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    the children have to be tested
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    to see if they need
    English as a second language services.
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    And I was like, "Yes! My kids
    are going to ace this test."
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    But that's not what happened.
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    So you can see behind me the results
    from my daughter's ESL placement exam.
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    She got a perfect five out of five
    for comprehension,
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    for reading and listening.
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    But she only got three out of five
    for speaking and writing.
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    And I was like, "This is really weird,
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    because this kid
    talks my ear off all the time."
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    (Laughter)
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    But I figured it's just one test
    on one day, and it's not a big deal.
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    Until, several years later,
    my son started school,
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    and my son also scored
    as a non-native speaker of English
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    on the exam.
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    And I was like, "This is really weird,
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    and it doesn't seem like a coincidence."
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    So I sent a note in to the teacher,
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    and she was very kind.
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    She sent me a long message explaining
    why he had been placed in this way.
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    Some of the things that she said
    really caught my attention.
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    For one thing, she said that
    even a native speaker of English
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    might not score at advanced level
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    on this test,
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    depending on what kinds of resource
    and enrichment they were getting at home.
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    Now, this tells me that the test
    wasn't doing a great job
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    of measuring English proficiency,
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    but it may have been measuring
    something like how much resources
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    kids are exposed to at home,
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    in which case, those kids need
    different types of support at school.
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    They really don't need
    English language assistance.
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    Another thing that she mentioned
    caught my attention as a linguist.
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    She said that she had asked my son
    to repeat the sentence,
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    "Who has Jane's pencil?"
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    And he repeated, "Who has Jane pencil?"
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    She said this is a typical error made
    by a non-native English-speaking student
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    whose native language does not contain
    a similar structure for possessives.
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    The reason this caught my attention
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    is because I know
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    that there is a systematic,
    rule-governed variety of English
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    in which this possessive construction
    is completely grammatical.
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    That variety is known to linguists
    as "African-American English."
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    And African-American English
    is actually group of dialects
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    that's spoken across the United States,
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    mostly in African-American communities.
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    But it just so happens
    that my son's school
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    is about 60 percent African-American.
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    And we know that at this age,
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    children are picking things up
    from their friends,
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    they're experimenting with language,
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    they're using it in different contexts.
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    I think when the teacher saw my son,
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    she didn't see a child who she expected
    to speak African-American English.
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    And so instead of evaluating him
    as a child who was natively acquiring
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    multiple dialects of English,
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    she evaluated him as a child
    whose standard English was deficient.
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    Language and social categories
    are intricately connected,
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    and we bring so much baggage
    to the way that we understand language.
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    When you ask me a question like,
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    "Who counts as a speaker of a language?"
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    I don't really have
    a simple answer to that question.
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    But what I can tell you
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    is that people are pattern seekers,
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    and we're always looking for ways
    to connect the dots
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    between different types of information.
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    This can be a problem
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    when our underlying biases
    are projected onto language.
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    When I look at children like my own,
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    and I see them in the gentlest
    and most well-meaning of ways
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    being racially profiled
    as non-native speakers of English,
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    it makes me wonder:
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    What's going to happen
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    as they move from elementary school
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    onto high school and college
    and onto their first jobs?
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    When they walk into an interview,
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    will the person sitting
    across the table from them
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    look at their color or their last name
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    and hear them as speaking
    with a Spanish accent
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    or as speaking bad English?
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    These are the kinds of judgments
    that can have long-reaching effects
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    on people's lives.
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    So I hope that that person, just like you,
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    will have reflected
    on the naturalized links
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    between language and social categories
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    and will have questioned their assumptions
    about what it really means
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    to be a speaker of a language.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Who counts as a speaker of a language?
Speaker:
Anna Babel
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:55

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