由内而外的文化素养

Alex Kendall, Thomas Hopkins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自1997年以来,英国政策制定者对成人扫盲教育越来越感兴趣,因为他们认为扫盲成绩与积极的经济参与、社会包容和生活机会转变之间存在因果关系。然而,在识字研究领域的研究表明,许多认为自己是初级读者的囚犯报告说,由于正规教育而感到疏远,他们没有充分考虑到学习者给他们的学习带来的社会身份,或者他们希望如何利用识字来改变他们的生活。这导致了囚犯作为学习者的模型的缺陷,这种模型强加了“被破坏的教育身份”,并且未能将囚犯作为积极的、真正的学习参与者参与进来。在这篇文章中,作者利用Shannon Trust在英国监狱进行的为期一年的基于监狱的阅读计划的定性研究阶段产生的数据,探索监狱扫盲教育的替代方法,这些方法挑战了正规教育的传统,并将学习者的身份和愿望置于初级读者学习过程的核心。项目的定性阶段涉及八个监狱环境中的12个焦点小组,其中包括参与香农信托同侪阅读计划的20名学习者和37名导师参与者。作者仔细倾听学习者和导师描述他们的同伴对同伴学习经验的声音,并插入安妮塔·威尔逊的教育性和第三空间识字的概念,以阅读参与者的正式和非正式扫盲教育经验。他们利用这一分析来确定和描述一种“扎根教学法”方法,这种方法将学习视为社会实践,使囚犯能够重新想象自己既是学习者又是社会行动者,并开始将他们的学习与自我导向的坚持认同建立联系。作者最后考虑了这项工作对监狱扫盲教学的影响,以及扎根教学法思想在发展更具挑衅性的监狱教师教育方法中的潜在作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inside Out Literacies
Since 1997, adult literacy education has been of increasing interest to UK policy makers amid perceptions/claims of a causal relationship between attainment in literacy and positive economic participation, social inclusion, and life chance transformation. However, research in the field of literacy studies suggests that many prisoners who identify as beginner readers, report feeling alienated by formal education failing to take sufficient account of the social identities learners bring to their learning or how they want to use literacy to bring about change in their lives. This has resulted in deficit models of the prisoner as learner that impose ‘spoiled educational identities' and fail to engage prisoners as active, agentic participants in their learning. In this article, the authors draw on data produced in the qualitative phase of a year-long study across the English prison estate of Shannon Trust's prison-based reading plan, to explore alternative approaches to prison literacy education that challenge the traditions of formal education and put learner identity and aspiration at the heart of the beginner reader learning process. The qualitative phase of the project involved twelve focus groups across eight prison settings and included 20 learner, and 37 mentor participants engaged in the Shannon Trust peer-reading programme. The authors listen closely to the voices of learners and mentors describing their experiences of peer to peer learning and plug in Anita Wilson's concepts of educentricity and third space literacies to read participants' experiences of formal and informal literacy education. They make use of this analysis to identify and describe a ‘grounded pedagogy' approach that pays attention to learning as social practice and enables prisoners to re-imagine themselves both as learners and social actors and to begin to connect their learning to self-directed desistence identity building. The authors conclude with a consideration of the implications of this work for prison literacy teaching and the potential role of grounded pedagogy ideas in the development of more provocative approaches to prison teacher education.
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