Reframing Literacy in Adult ESL Programs: Making the case for the inclusion of identity

Michael Atkinson
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

Adult  ESL  programs  in  the  Australian  context  are  heavily  influenced  by  neo-liberal notions  of  functional  literacy  and  numeracy.  This paper argues that such notions, designed to enable the learner to function within the workplace or community can fail to acknowledge the complexity of ESL program participation for adult learners. This may be considered especially so for pre-literate learners from refugee backgrounds who have low or minimal levels of literacy in their own language and are hence negotiating a new skill set, a new culture and arguably a new sense of identity. This paper is based on research which points to the need to position the learning of literacy and numeracy in the ESL context as a social and educational journey made meaningful by a learner's sense of (emerging) identity.  In this context a holistic, socially orientated  understanding  of  their  learning  and  their progress  is  preferable  to  an approach  which  views  and  evaluates  learners  against  preconceived  functional  literacy skills. The participants in this study were people of refugee background from Africa with minimal literacy skills.
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在成人ESL课程中重新建构读写能力:提出身分认同的案例
澳大利亚的成人ESL课程深受新自由主义的功能性读写和算术概念的影响。本文认为,这些旨在使学习者能够在工作场所或社区中发挥作用的概念可能无法认识到成人学习者参与ESL课程的复杂性。对于来自难民背景的未识字的学习者来说尤其如此,他们在自己的语言方面的识字水平很低或最低,因此正在谈判一套新的技能、一种新的文化,可以说是一种新的认同感。本文基于一项研究,该研究指出,需要将ESL背景下的识字和算术学习定位为学习者(新兴)身份感所带来的有意义的社会和教育旅程。在这种情况下,对他们的学习和进步的全面的、面向社会的理解比一种根据先入为主的功能性读写技能来看待和评估学习者的方法更可取。这项研究的参与者是来自非洲的难民背景,识字能力最低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Literacy and Numeracy Studies
Literacy and Numeracy Studies EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
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26 weeks
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