The first volume of the series "Language and Ideology," this
work explores mature literacy. Patrick L. Courts argues that while
by society's standards many people can read well, they are unable
to create meaning from the world of oral and written language. His
theory derives from psycho- and sociolinguistics, cognitive
psychology, philosophy, literary criticism, and whole language
theory. Courts criticizes programmed activities, texts, and
workbooks--challenging the control that commercial textbook
publishers and test-makers exert on education. He shuns
overemphasis on methods and offers an alternative approach firmly
grounded in theory and aimed at empowering teachers and
students.
Courts begins with a discussion of liberatory pedagogy, drawing
from whole language theory, the social semiotics of Halliday,
reader-response theory, and the ideas of Heidegger and Derrida. The
subsequent methodological chapters build a case for what Courts
calls a conservative revolution in literacy education: teachers
combining a sound base of theory with methodologies to tap
students' generative, creative powers. Courts's methodology aims to
empower people as meaning makers. This book is valuable to teachers
and administrators, textbook publishers, and students of
education.
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