Challenging Autonomous Boundaries in Literacy Education Across the World

IF 1.4 2区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Literacy Research Pub Date : 2022-05-20 DOI:10.1177/1086296X221098450
E. Bauer, Aria Razfar, A. Skerrett
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Abstract

One of the great challenges in literacy research has been moving away from autonomous, individualist, and decontextualized views of language, literacy, and learning toward more situated, social, and ideological approaches to literacy research. A common theme across all the studies presented in this volume is how reductive ideas about literacy still persist, impacting equity, and how they are challenged by teachers and students in a variety of national and international spaces. Overall, the studies presented in this volume are a reminder of how the social and political context of learners affects literacy education across the world. In this issue, we explore multiple contexts in which the autonomous boundaries between language, literacy, and learning remain dominant and resisted. First, Usree Bhattacharya in “‘I Am a Parrot’: Literacy Ideologies and Rote Learning” examines the dominance of rote learning practices in India. Drawing on longitudinal data from a study of language socialization in an orphanage in New Delhi, Bhattacharya shows how reductive literacy ideologies are discursively resisted in everyday practice. This study sheds light not only on how inequality is reproduced but also on how active learner subjectivities could be fostered in rural and suburban India. Another autonomous boundary, the line between public and private literacy practices, is challenged in Margaret Mackey’s study, “Private Readerly Experiences of Presence and Implications for Practices and Policies.” Drawing on Philip Barnard’s interactive model of theory and practice, this study examines the paradox of reading as simultaneously public and private, yet intensely individual and unique. It challenges narrow assumptions of what should count as reading, especially as it relates to what is easily measured. It further considers methodological, pedagogical, and policy implications for literacy education. Autonomous literacy ideologies can be seen at the national level in the growing popularity of Seals of Biliteracy. In “Biliteracy as Property: Promises and Perils of the Seal of Biliteracy,” Chris Chang-Bacon and Soria Colomer offer a critical analysis of this growing trend. They draw on policy and visual discourse analysis to show how the Seals of Biliteracy in 23 states have mimicked discourses of whiteness as property to commodify language and position biliteracy as property. This study is a cautionary tale of the perils of allowing state authority to assess, award, and authenticate biliteracy as a form of property. It is a reminder that literacy is inherently ideological, and the field of literacy research cannot afford to be silent on such a consequential issue. In “Apprenticing for Equity Literacy Teaching: A Needed Change in Teacher Education,” Althier Lazar draws on critical race theory and landscapes of practice Editorial
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挑战全球扫盲教育的自主边界
扫盲研究的一大挑战是,从对语言、扫盲和学习的自主的、个人主义的和非情境化的观点,转向更情境化的、社会的和意识形态的扫盲研究方法。本卷中提出的所有研究的一个共同主题是,关于扫盲的简化观点如何仍然存在,影响公平,以及它们如何在各种国家和国际空间中受到教师和学生的挑战。总的来说,本卷中提出的研究提醒人们,学习者的社会和政治背景如何影响世界各地的扫盲教育。在本期中,我们探讨了语言、读写能力和学习之间的自主界限仍然占主导地位和受到抵制的多种背景。首先,Usree Bhattacharya在《我是一只鹦鹉:读写意识形态和死记硬背》一书中考察了死记硬背在印度的主导地位。巴塔查里亚利用新德里一家孤儿院语言社会化研究的纵向数据,展示了在日常实践中,简化的识字意识形态是如何被话语抵制的。这项研究不仅揭示了不平等是如何再现的,而且还揭示了如何在印度农村和郊区培养积极的学习者主体性。另一个自主的界限,公共和私人读写实践之间的界限,在玛格丽特·麦基的研究中受到了挑战,“私人读者的存在体验及其对实践和政策的影响”。借鉴菲利普·巴纳德的理论与实践的互动模式,本研究探讨了阅读既是公共的又是私人的,但又具有强烈的个性和独特性的悖论。它挑战了关于什么应该算作阅读的狭隘假设,尤其是当它涉及到容易衡量的东西时。它进一步考虑对扫盲教育的方法、教学和政策影响。在国家层面上,自主的读写意识可以从“双语印章”的日益普及中看到。在《作为财产的双语能力:双语能力的承诺和危险》一书中,Chris Chang-Bacon和Soria Colomer对这一日益增长的趋势进行了批判性分析。他们利用政策和视觉话语分析来展示23个州的“双语之印”是如何模仿白人作为财产的话语来商品化语言并将双语定位为财产的。这项研究是一个警示故事,说明允许国家当局评估、奖励和鉴定双语能力作为一种财产的危险。它提醒我们,读写能力本质上是意识形态的,读写能力研究领域不能对这样一个重要的问题保持沉默。在“公平素养教学的学徒:教师教育的必要变革”中,Althier Lazar借鉴了批判性种族理论和实践景观
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: The Journal of Literacy Research (JLR) is a peer-reviewed journal contributes to the advancement research related to literacy and literacy education. Current focuses include, but are not limited to: -Literacies from preschool to adulthood -Evolving and expanding definitions of ‘literacy’ -Innovative applications of theory, pedagogy and instruction -Methodological developments in literacy and language research
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