“他们让我们学到了什么”:探讨白人英语教师如何通过课程和教学法培养学生的批判性素养

L. Kelly
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:本定性研究考察了课堂观察和成绩单、师生访谈和学生写作,以调查白人英语教师如何通过课堂文学培养学生对种族和压迫的批判素养。由于批判性读写领域的研究和实践尚未有效地以黑人,土著和有色人种(BIPOC)的生活和历史为中心,本研究旨在通过研究文学教师如何通过明确地与种族和压迫结构作斗争的文学教学来破坏白人的永久存在,从而扩展现有的批判性读写研究。设计/方法/方法本研究通过对东北某大城市一所城市高中的课堂教学和课程设置进行为期一年的调查,考察了两位白人英语教师的教学实践。本研究的首要问题是,白人英语教师如何通过课堂文学培养学生对种族和社会正义的批判素养?指导这项研究的其他问题是:这些班级的学生如何了解压迫结构?在这些课堂上用什么语言来讨论关于权力的想法?这些教师使用什么文本和材料来让学生参与批判性读写实践?本研究的发现为白人英语教师如何通过他们的教学方法和课程培养学生关于种族和压迫的批判性素养提供了见解。两位老师在课堂上引入批判性语言和框架,支持学生批判性地参与课堂文学和他们自己的社会世界的能力。此外,这些教师的实践强调白人教师需要将自己的知识和身份去中心化,以有效地培养学生的批判性和社会政治发展。原创性/价值本研究回应了McLean等人(2021)的呼吁,即通过将种族集中在课堂上批判性读写能力发展的方法中,打破该领域“白人学者以欧洲为中心的霸权观点的延续”。通过分析来自同一所学校不同课程方法的课堂数据,本研究不仅考察了教育者在旨在通过英语语言艺术培养学生批判性和社会政治发展的课堂上教授的内容,还考察了他们是如何教授的。这项研究为非bipoc教育工作者在教授黑人和拉丁裔人口时发展批判性和文化上可持续的教学法提供了希望。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“What they allow us to learn”: exploring how white English teachers cultivate students’ critical literacies through curriculum and pedagogy
Purpose This qualitative research study examines classroom observations and transcripts, teacher and student interviews and student writing to investigate how white English teachers can cultivate students’ critical literacies regarding race and oppression through classroom literature. As research and practice in the field of critical literacy has yet to effectively center black, indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) lives and histories, this study aims to expand on existing critical literacy research by examining how literature teachers disrupt the perpetuation of whiteness through literature instruction that explicitly grapples with race and structures of oppression. Design/methodology/approach This research examines the pedagogical practices of two white English teachers through a yearlong investigation of classroom instruction and curriculum in an urban high school in a large Northeastern city. The overarching question of this study asks, how do white English teachers cultivate students’ critical literacies regarding race and social justice through classroom literature? Additional questions that guided this study are: How do students in these classes learn about structures of oppression? What language is used in these classrooms to discuss ideas about power? What texts and materials do these teachers use to engage students in critical literacy practices? Findings The findings of this study provide insight as to how white English teachers can foster students’ critical literacy development regarding race and oppression through their pedagogy and curriculum. The two teachers’ introduction of critical language and frameworks in the classroom supported students’ ability to critically engage with classroom literature and with their own social worlds. In addition, these teachers’ practices emphasize the need for white teachers to decenter their own knowledge and identities to effectively foster students' critical and sociopolitical development. Originality/value This research responds to McLean et al.’s (2021) call for a disruption of the “perpetuation of Eurocentric, hegemonic perspectives by white scholars” in the field by centering race in approaches to critical literacy development in the classroom. By analyzing data from classrooms in the same school with distinct curricular approaches, this study examines not only what but also how educators are teaching in classrooms designed to cultivate students’ critical and sociopolitical development through English Language Arts. This study offers hope for developing critical and culturally sustaining pedagogies among non-BIPOC educators who teach Black and Latinx populations.
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