Stanton Wortham
Boston College, Lynch School of Education, Department Member
- University of Pennsylvania, Education, Culture and Society, Faculty Memberadd
- Philosophy, Education, Anthropology, Sociology, Communication, Languages and Linguistics, and 18 moreCultural Theory, Culture, Semiotics, Philosophy of Education, Immigration, Linguistic Anthropology, Social and Political Philosophy, Language and Culture, Language in Society, Educational Philosophy, Immigration and identity (Anthropology), Latina/o immigration, Culture and Language, Immigration (Anthropology), Sociolinguistics, Scales, Discourse Analysis, and Narrativeedit
- An award-winning teacher, scholar, and documentary film producer, Stanton E. F. Wortham, Ph.D., comes to the Lynch Sc... moreAn award-winning teacher, scholar, and documentary film producer, Stanton E. F. Wortham, Ph.D., comes to the Lynch School of Education as its inaugural Charles F. Donovan, S.J., Dean from the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education, where he was the Judy and Howard Berkowitz Professor and associate dean for academic affairs.
A linguistic anthropologist and educational ethnographer with a particular expertise in how identities develop in human interactions, Wortham has conducted research spanning education, anthropology, linguistics, psychology, sociology, and philosophy. He is the author or editor of nine books and more than 80 articles and chapters that cover a range of topics including linguistic anthropology, discourse analysis, “learning identity” (how social identification and academic learning interconnect), and education in the new Latino diaspora.
He spent 18 years as a professor and administrator at Penn, where he served twice as interim dean of the Graduate School of Education and won multiple awards for teaching excellence, including the University of Pennsylvania Lindback Foundation Award for Distinguished Teaching.
For the last 10 years, Wortham has studied the experiences of Mexican immigrant students both in and outside of school as they adjusted to lives in communities with largely non-Latino populations.
As part of that project, he was the executive producer of the award-winning 2014 documentary Adelante, which chronicles how a Mexican-immigrant and Irish-American community are revitalizing a once-struggling parish. Wortham is currently writing a book based on his research in the small town.edit
In The grammar of autobiography, Jean Quigley makes a claim that one often hears nowadays: that the self is constructed in autobiographical narrative discourse. Two dimensions of the work distinguish her analysis of narrative... more
In The grammar of autobiography, Jean Quigley makes a claim that one often hears nowadays: that the self is constructed in autobiographical narrative discourse. Two dimensions of the work distinguish her analysis of narrative self-construction from many other treatments of the subject. First, she offers a genuinely interdisciplinary account, drawing on functional linguistics, theoretical and developmental psychology, and accounts of language development. Second, she studies a particular category of linguistic forms – modals – as the key to narrative self-construction.
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Once a predominantly White and Black community, since 1990 Marshall has experienced a 900% increase in residents of Mexican origin. This rapid demographic shift is particularly evident in changes to how commercial and residential spaces... more
Once a predominantly White and Black community, since 1990 Marshall has experienced a 900% increase in residents of Mexican origin. This rapid demographic shift is particularly evident in changes to how commercial and residential spaces are owned and utilized. This article examines how residents of Marshall use spatiotemporal scales to imagine the economic and social trajectories of their town, and assign roles to different groups of people within these trajectories. We analyze how Marshall residents spacialize their accounts of community change by attending to two narratives that circulate simulta-neouslydthe first is about community renewal following the arrival of Mexican residents; the second is about Black flight in response to perceived community disintegration. By tracing the production and circulation of these narratives, we move beyond an analysis of " othering " that presupposes a native " us " and immigrant " them. " Instead, we explore how Marshall's diverse history of immigration, segregation, industrial development and decline produces heterogeneous, complex and shifting " others. "
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Colleoni entire city block. Although the custodians work diligently - so that the tile floors shine and the bathrooms are clean - the school is deteriorating. Paint is peeling off the ceilings in most hall-ways and classrooms, and the... more
Colleoni entire city block. Although the custodians work diligently - so that the tile floors shine and the bathrooms are clean - the school is deteriorating. Paint is peeling off the ceilings in most hall-ways and classrooms, and the building feels old. When it was built about 50 years ...


