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Designed to stimulate debate and critical thinking and to draw
readers' attention to the ideological nature of literacy education
across a broad range of literacy contexts, this book crosses
traditional boundaries between the study of family, community, and
school literacies to offer a unique global perspective on multiple
literacies, from theory to case studies of various settings. These
examples suggest ways that literacy practices should be created by
simultaneously shaping relationships and identity, and by
privileging particular literacy practices in particular situations.
The dialogue within the book among chapter authors writing across
traditionally distinct fields highlights the interconnections among
diverse literacy sites and stimulates the pursuit of a more
integrated and interdisciplinary approach to literacy education.
The critical and dialogic approach serves to challenge and extend
many conventional notions surrounding literacy education in
communities, schools, and families.
"Portraits of Literacy Across Families, Communities, and Schools:
Intersections and Tensions" is particularly relevant for scholars
and students in the area of literacy, broadly speaking, including
family literacy, community literacy, adult literacy, critical
language studies, multiliteracies, youth literacy, English as a
second language, language and social policy, and global literacy.
Additionally, the inclusion of studies derived from a variety of
research methods and designs makes this is a useful text in
research methodology courses that aim to present and analyze
real-life examples of literacy research designs and methods.
In Disrupting Boundaries in Education and Research, six educational
researchers explore together the potentialities of
transdisciplinary research that de-centres human behaviour and
gives materiality its due in the making of educational worlds. The
book presents accounts of what happens when researchers think and
act with new materiality and post-human theories to disrupt
boundaries such as self and other, human and non-human,
representation and objectivity. Each of the core chapters works
with different new materiality concepts to disrupt these boundaries
and to consider the emotive, sensory, nuanced, material and
technological aspects of learning in diverse settings, such as in
mathematics and learning to swim, discovering the bio-products of
'eco-sustainable' building, making videos and contending with
digital government and its alienating effects. When humans are no
longer at the centre of the unfolding world it is both disorienting
and exhilarating. This book is an invitation to continue along
these paths.
The field of languages and literacies education is undergoing rapid
transformation. Scholarship that draws upon feminist,
post-colonial, new material and posthuman ontologies is
transcending disciplinary boundaries and disrupting traditional
binaries between human and nonhuman, the natural and the cultural,
the material and the discursive. In Transforming Language and
Literacy Education, editors Kelleen Toohey, Suzanne Smythe, Diane
Dagenais and Magali Forte bring together accessible, conceptually
rich stories from internationally diverse authors to guide new
practices, new conversations and new thinking among scholars and
educators at the forefront of languages and literacies learning.
The book addresses these concepts for diverse groups of learners
including young children, youth and adults in formal educational
and community-based settings. Challenging and disruptive, this is a
unique and important contribution to language and literacy
education.
The field of languages and literacies education is undergoing rapid
transformation. Scholarship that draws upon feminist,
post-colonial, new material and posthuman ontologies is
transcending disciplinary boundaries and disrupting traditional
binaries between human and nonhuman, the natural and the cultural,
the material and the discursive. In Transforming Language and
Literacy Education, editors Kelleen Toohey, Suzanne Smythe, Diane
Dagenais and Magali Forte bring together accessible, conceptually
rich stories from internationally diverse authors to guide new
practices, new conversations and new thinking among scholars and
educators at the forefront of languages and literacies learning.
The book addresses these concepts for diverse groups of learners
including young children, youth and adults in formal educational
and community-based settings. Challenging and disruptive, this is a
unique and important contribution to language and literacy
education.
Designed to stimulate debate and critical thinking and to draw
readers' attention to the ideological nature of literacy education
across a broad range of literacy contexts, this book crosses
traditional boundaries between the study of family, community, and
school literacies to offer a unique global perspective on multiple
literacies, from theory to case studies of various settings. These
examples suggest ways that literacy practices should be created by
simultaneously shaping relationships and identity, and by
privileging particular literacy practices in particular situations.
The dialogue within the book among chapter authors writing across
traditionally distinct fields highlights the interconnections among
diverse literacy sites and stimulates the pursuit of a more
integrated and interdisciplinary approach to literacy education.
The critical and dialogic approach serves to challenge and extend
many conventional notions surrounding literacy education in
communities, schools, and families. Portraits of Literacy Across
Families, Communities, and Schools: Intersections and Tensions is
particularly relevant for scholars and students in the area of
literacy, broadly speaking, including family literacy, community
literacy, adult literacy, critical language studies,
multiliteracies, youth literacy, English as a second language,
language and social policy, and global literacy. Additionally, the
inclusion of studies derived from a variety of research methods and
designs makes this is a useful text in research methodology courses
that aim to present and analyze real-life examples of literacy
research designs and methods.
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