bookmarks  3

  •  

    n this paper we address the key issue on which this edition is focused – intel- lectual challenge – in light of Poincaré’s concern with understanding bodies of knowledge – how, over time, they are structured, acted upon, built, and theo- rised in educational settings. We make the case for reinstating the teaching of knowledge, including knowledge about language, at the forefront of consid- erations of educational practice and policy, and, more specifically, of teaching and researching language and literacy. Through this discussion we attempt to contribute to the line of effort rep- resented by contributions to this edition. The authors have taken seriously the fact that the proportion of students from a widening range of language back- grounds other than the medium of instruction in schools in Australia, as in many countries, continues to rise. This presents challenges to educators, and these authors point to fidelity to the intellectual substance and coherence of syllabus contents as the foremost of those challenges. We focus here in particu- lar on extending the two major messages we take from the papers collected in this edition: the need for a clearer articulation, first, of a disciplinarity-based understanding of knowledge, and second, of the relation between curricu- lum knowledge and the language of that curriculum knowledge, as shown in teachers’ knowledge of the nature of language and of how to intertwine the teaching of language with teaching of curriculum knowledge. Australian language and literacy educators, including those whose work appears in this edition, have attained international recognition for the advances they have made in articulating and studying the challenges and opportunities involved in serving all students’ language and literacy needs in rapid-change, multilingual environments (e.g., Cope & Kalantzis, 2000; Derewianka & Khan, 2001; Gibbons, 2002; 2006; Gray, 2007). In aiming to extend that view in this paper, we argue: (i) that there is a case for a redirection of focus onto the issueof intellectual challenge; (ii) that the sense of urgency associated with this redirection relates to the loss of a strong conception of knowledge (Bereiter & Scardamalia, 2003); (iii) that disciplinarity-based language and literacy educa- tion is critical, in that questions concerning language and literacy develop- ment through the school years are, at base, issues that require some coherent conceptualisation of how it is that each discipline/curriculum domain puts language and literacy resources to work in distinctive ways.
    8 years ago by @umatadema
    (0)
     
     
  •  

    In this paper we look at three identity positions salient in research of young people studying in complementary schools in Leicester, a large linguistically and ethnically diverse city in the East Midlands, England. Our discussion of identity focuses on three identity positions: multicultural, heritage and learner. The first two of these are linked to discussions on ethnicity as a social category. We explore the fluidity and stability of ethnicity as a social description in interview transcripts of young people at complementary schools. In addition, the paper explores another, more emergent identity salient in the two schools, that of ‘learner identity’. The research can be characterised as adopting a linguistic ethnographic approach using a team of ethnographers. Data was collected for 20 weeks by four researchers and consists of fieldnotes, interviews and audio recordings of classroom interactions. We consider the importance of ambiguity and certainty in students’ conceptualisation of themselves around ethnicity and linguistic diversity and look at the institutional role complementary schools play in the production of these and successful learner identities. We explore how complementary schools privilege and encourage these particular identity positionings in their endorsement of flexible bilingualism. Overall, we argue that complementary schools allowed the children a safe haven for exploring ethnic and linguistic identities while producing opportunities for performing successful learner identity. Published (publisher's copy) Peer Reviewed
    8 years ago by @umatadema
    (0)
     
     
  •  

    Genre-based approaches to teaching reading and writing have been widely adopted in Australia and other western education systems, and have achieved spectacular improvements in student outcomes, from twice to more than four times expected rates of learning (Culican 2005, Rose & Acevedo 2006). The development of these pedagogies in Australia has been fuelled by a rapid growth in the proportion of students from non- English speaking backgrounds who require academic skills. Similarly, economic changes impacting on educational demands in China are now sparking interest in innovative approaches to English literacy, particularly in English for Academic Purposes. However, introducing a genre-based literacy pedagogy in English language programs presents a number of challenges, given the variations in education histories and current practices in China and the west. These challenges can be divided along two lines, firstly what it is that EAP students need to learn, including knowledge about language and skills in using this knowledge, and secondly how they can most effectively learn this knowledge and skills, and how to teach them. In this paper we will first examine the ‘what’ of literacy learning, in terms of the genre-based model of language and the skills that English language learners require, and second the ‘how’ of literacy teaching, by reviewing the role of dialogue in the genre-based language in education work of the Sydney School (Martin 2000/2006, Martin & Rose 2005).
    9 years ago by @umatadema
    (0)
     
     
  • ⟨⟨
  • 1
  • ⟩⟩

publications  

    No matching posts.
  • ⟨⟨
  • ⟩⟩