Missing the sociopolitical: examining discourses of writing in a US high-performing, urban middle school

IF 0.8 4区 教育学 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH English Teaching-Practice and Critique Pub Date : 2020-09-23 DOI:10.1108/ETPC-12-2019-0166
Nadia Behizadeh
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Abstract

Purpose This paper aims to examine two teachers’ beliefs and practices on teaching writing at an urban, high-performing middle school to determine: What discourses of writing are being taught in an urban, high-performing US public middle school? What factors prevent or enable particular discourses? Design/methodology/approach Drawing on case study methods, this study uses a single-case design with two seventh-grade teachers at a high-performing urban school as embedded units of analysis. Data collection took place over one semester. Data sources included observations and interviews with the two teachers, an interview with an administrator and multiple instructional artifacts, including unit and lesson plans. Observational data were analyzed using a priori code for writing discourses (Ivanic, 2004) and interview data were analyzed for factors affecting instruction using open, axial and selective coding. Findings Both teachers enacted extended multi-discourse writing instruction integrating skills, creativity, process, genre and social practices discourses supported by their beliefs and experience; colleagues; students’ relatively high test scores; and relative curricular freedom. However, there was minimal evidence of a sociopolitical discourse aligned with critical literacy practices. Limits to the sociopolitical discourse included a lack of a social justice orientation, an influx of low-performing students, a focus on raising test scores, data-focused professional development and district pacing guides. Racism is also considered as an underlying structural factor undermining the sociopolitical discourse. Research limitations/implications Although generalizability is limited because of the small sample size and the unique context of this study, two major implications are the need to layer discourses in writing instruction while centering critical pedagogy and develop teacher beliefs and knowledge. To support these two implications, this study suggests developing university-school partnerships and professional development opportunities that create a community of practice around comprehensive writing instruction. Future research will involve continuing to work with the participants in this study and documenting the effects of providing theory and tools for integrating the sociopolitical discourse into middle school curricula and instruction. Originality/value This study contributes to the field of literacy education’s understanding of internal and external factors limiting the sociopolitical discourse in a high-performing, urban middle school in the USA, an understudied context.
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缺少社会政治:考察美国一所高水平城市中学的写作话语
本文旨在研究两位教师在城市高绩效中学教学写作的信念和实践,以确定:在美国城市高绩效公立中学教授什么写作话语?哪些因素会阻止或促成特定的话语?设计/方法/方法借鉴案例研究方法,本研究采用单案例设计,其中包括一所高绩效城市学校的两名七年级教师作为嵌入式分析单元。数据收集工作进行了一个学期。数据来源包括对两位教师的观察和访谈,对一位管理人员的访谈和多种教学工件,包括单元和课程计划。观察数据采用写作话语的先验编码(Ivanic, 2004)进行分析,访谈数据采用开放编码、轴向编码和选择性编码分析影响教学的因素。两名教师都在其信仰和经验的支持下实施了扩展的多语篇写作指导,包括技能、创造力、过程、体裁和社会实践语篇;同事;学生考试成绩相对较高;以及相对的课程自由。然而,很少有证据表明社会政治话语与批判性读写实践相一致。社会政治话语的局限包括缺乏社会正义导向、大量涌入表现不佳的学生、注重提高考试成绩、注重数据的专业发展和地区步调指南。种族主义也被认为是破坏社会政治话语的潜在结构性因素。研究的局限性/启示虽然由于样本量小和本研究的独特背景,概括性受到限制,但两个主要的启示是需要在写作教学中分层话语,同时以批判性教学法为中心,并培养教师的信念和知识。为了支持这两个含义,本研究建议发展大学与学校的合作伙伴关系和专业发展机会,以创建一个围绕综合写作教学的实践社区。未来的研究将包括继续与本研究的参与者合作,并记录为将社会政治话语整合到中学课程和教学中提供理论和工具的效果。原创性/价值本研究有助于扫盲教育领域对限制美国一所高绩效城市中学社会政治话语的内部和外部因素的理解,这是一个尚未得到充分研究的背景。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
11.10%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: English Teaching: Practice and Critique seeks to promote research and theory related to English literacy that is grounded in a range of contexts: classrooms, schools and wider educational constituencies. The journal has as its main focus English teaching in L1 settings. Submissions focused on EFL will be considered only if they have clear pertinence to English literacy in L1 settings. It provides a place where authors from a range of backgrounds can identify matters of common concern and thereby foster broad professional communities and networks. Where possible, English Teaching: Practice and Critique encourages comparative approaches to topics and issues. The journal published three types of manuscripts: research articles, essays (theoretical papers, reviews, and responses), and teacher narratives. Often special issues of the journal focus on distinct topics; however, unthemed manuscript submissions are always welcome and published in most issues.
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