Perry Gilmore

Professor, Teaching, Learning & Sociocultural Studies
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Education Building, Room 512

Perry Gilmore, Ph.D., a sociolinguist and educational anthropologist, is professor of Language, Reading and Culture (LRC), and Second Language Acquisition and Teaching (SLAT) faculty at the University of Arizona. She is also professor emerita and affiliate faculty of the Alaska Native Language Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. She has conducted communication, language, and literacy research in a wide variety of urban and rural settings in the United States, Russia, Africa and Australia. Interest in language and communication has led her to explore a wide range of questions on the origin, nature, and development of interaction and communication, including: field studies of non-human primate communication in the West Indies and East Africa, pidginization and creolization of languages, social aspects of literacy acquisition, and Indigenous language and culture regenesis. She is the author of numerous ethnographic studies and co-editor of several major ethnography collections including, Children In and Out of School: Ethnography and EducationThe Acquisition of Literacy: Ethnographic Perspectives, and Indigenous Epistemologies and Education: Self-DeterminationAnthropology and Human Rights. Her most recent book, Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki, documents the creative invention of a private Swahili pidgin language by two five year old friends in postcolonial Kenya. Gilmore is the past President of the Council on Anthropology and Education (CAE) and the recipient of the CAE prestigious George and Louise Spindler Award for lifetime achievement in Anthropology and Education.