Centering Black women’s ways of knowing: A review of critical literacies research in early childhood

IF 1.3 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Early Childhood Literacy Pub Date : 2022-08-26 DOI:10.1177/14687984221121156
Francheska D. Starks
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Abstract

In the most recent edition of the Handbook of Reading Research, Ebony Elizabeth Thomas and colleagues (2020) identify the need to recontextualize critical literacy pedagogy and research in ways that center Black and Indigenous communities. Although critical literacy has a rich tradition in emancipatory work (e.g. Freire, 1996), Thomas et al. argue for the need to begin elsewhere, with the knowledge and traditions of Black and Indigenous communities, to produce literacy research and pedagogy that is more responsive to current social issues and iterations of racism. In this article, I combine their insights with those of early literacy researchers, such as Candace R. Kuby and Tara Gutshall Rucker, (e.g. Kuby, 2013; Kuby and Rucker, 2020) to suggest that the shifting of theoretical framings may be a useful way of broadening the context of critical literacies research and scholarship. Kuby and Rucker’s (2020) examination explores offerings from postructural and posthumanist theories for expanding conceptions of literacy in efforts to challenge our ideas of literacies, inequalities, and justice in early literacy research. Similarly, I analyze the affordances of Pro-Black and marginalized theories in critical literacies research, such as Black Feminist Thought (Collins, 2002), for understanding and expanding how we attend to positionality in early literacy educational research. Grounded in Black Feminist theories (Collins, 2002) and methodologies (Evans-Winters, 2019) as well my own positionality as a Black woman, this article takes up one specific concern from the call for this special issue, that is to address the lack of Pro-Black research in early literacy education. In so doing, I aim to broaden the ways that a historically praxis-oriented body of research in early childhood and elementary education, critical literacies research, is theorized and enacted by integrating more thoroughly Black women’s ways of knowing. I explore how to leverage our individual and combined perspectives, which are grounded in our rich history of resistance and thriving in the face of adversity, to produce knowledge and literacy practices useful for justice-oriented education. Through an analysis of academic literature related to critical literacies research and Black women educators in early childhood and elementary education, I address the question: How are Black women’s ways of knowing integrated in early childhood and elementary critical literacies research with participants who are Black women educators? I offer a sense of the extent to which Black women educators’ ways of knowing are associated with the term critical literacy and also identify fruitful strategies that critical literacies researchers can use to integrate Black women’s ways of knowing into the knowledge base and practices of critical literacies in early literacy research. Some strategies include integrating Black women educators' emotions and spiritual knowledge into the research and co-researching with Black women who are also participants.
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以黑人女性的认知方式为中心:儿童早期批判性文学研究综述
在最新一期的《阅读研究手册》中,Ebony Elizabeth Thomas及其同事(2020)指出,有必要以黑人和土著社区为中心,重新文本化批判性识字教育学和研究。尽管批判性识字在解放工作中有着丰富的传统(例如Freire,1996),Thomas等人认为,有必要从其他地方开始,利用黑人和土著社区的知识和传统,进行更能应对当前社会问题和种族主义反复的识字研究和教学法。在这篇文章中,我将他们的见解与早期识字研究人员的见解相结合,如Candace R.Kuby和Tara Gutshall Rucker(例如Kuby,2013;Kuby和Rucker,2020),以表明理论框架的转变可能是拓宽批判性文学研究和学术背景的一种有用方式。Kuby和Rucker(2020)的研究探索了后结构主义和后人文主义理论的提供,以扩展识字概念,努力挑战我们在早期识字研究中对识字、不平等和正义的看法。同样,我分析了批判文学研究中亲黑人和边缘化理论的可供性,如黑人女权主义思想(Collins,2002),以理解和扩展我们如何关注早期识字教育研究中的立场。本文以黑人女权主义理论(Collins,2002)和方法论(Evans-Winters,2019)以及我作为黑人女性的立场为基础,从对这一特殊问题的呼吁中提出了一个具体的担忧,即解决早期扫盲教育中缺乏亲黑人研究的问题。通过这样做,我的目标是通过更彻底地整合黑人女性的认识方式,拓宽幼儿和小学教育中以历史实践为导向的研究机构,批判性文学研究的理论化和实施方式。我探讨了如何利用我们的个人和综合观点,这些观点建立在我们丰富的抵抗历史和在逆境中茁壮成长的基础上,为面向正义的教育提供有用的知识和识字实践。通过分析与批判性文学研究相关的学术文献以及幼儿和小学教育中的黑人女性教育者,我提出了一个问题:黑人女性的认知方式如何与黑人女性教育工作者的参与者融合在幼儿和小学批判性文学研究中?我了解了黑人女性教育工作者的认识方式与批判性识字一词的关联程度,并确定了批判性识字研究人员可以用来将黑人女性的认识方式融入早期识字研究中批判性识字的知识库和实践的富有成效的策略。一些策略包括将黑人女性教育者的情感和精神知识融入研究,并与同样参与研究的黑人女性共同研究。
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来源期刊
Journal of Early Childhood Literacy
Journal of Early Childhood Literacy EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
12.50%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: Journal of Early Childhood Literacy is a fully peer-reviewed international journal. Since its foundation in 2001 JECL has rapidly become a distinctive, leading voice in research in early childhood literacy, with a multinational range of contributors and readership. The main emphasis in the journal is on papers researching issues related to the nature, function and use of literacy in early childhood. This includes the history, development, use, learning and teaching of literacy, as well as policy and strategy. Research papers may address theoretical, methodological, strategic or applied aspects of early childhood literacy and could be reviews of research issues. JECL is both a forum for debate about the topic of early childhood literacy and a resource for those working in the field. Literacy is broadly defined; JECL focuses on the 0-8 age range. Our prime interest in empirical work is those studies that are situated in authentic or naturalistic settings; this differentiates the journal from others in the area. JECL, therefore, tends to favour qualitative work but is also open to research employing quantitative methods. The journal is multi-disciplinary. We welcome submissions from diverse disciplinary backgrounds including: education, cultural psychology, literacy studies, sociology, anthropology, historical and cultural studies, applied linguistics and semiotics.
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