拥抱广泛的文学素养:我们的集体编辑愿景

IF 1.5 4区 教育学 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Eric Claravall, Eric Junco, Jung Kim, Jill Castek, Michael Manderino
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We look forward to engaging collectively with readers, authors, members, and those outside of our fields to be a part of this critically important work (Figure 1).</p><p>\n <b>Eric Claravall</b>\n </p><p>Associate Professor in Literacy and Special Education, Teaching Credentials, College of Education, California State University, California.</p><p>Before my position as a university instructor, I was a middle school special education teacher in a culturally diverse school district in northern California. I also taught in elementary school from kindergarten to fifth grade. My research advocacy is to address social justice, disrupt forms of oppression, and dismantle the structure of colonial ideologies in education through critical literacies and civic engagement. 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Likewise, we steadfastly promote culturally sustaining pedagogies and linguistically responsive teaching. We believe that these approaches amplify the work of scholars of color and emerging researchers and practitioners, fostering generative knowledge and practices in adolescent and adult literacies. We value multiple theoretical lenses while encouraging reflexivity on literacy practices, processes, and perspectives. We recognize multiple learning contexts and inter-relationships with particular attention to the overlooked contributions and ingenuity of educators and communities historically excluded and marginalized across local and global spaces.</p><p>We are committed to advancing research and practice at the intersections of literacy, equity, and social justice—embracing literacies as inclusive, expansive, empowering, and grounded in praxis. In alignment with the needs of educators and researchers, we envision JAAL as a space for illuminating disparities, disrupting oppressive systems, and promoting pluralistic, emancipatory, and transformative understandings of literacies.</p><p>We invite ILA and non-ILA members alike to become more familiar with the longstanding impact <i>JAAL</i> has had and the possibilities for impacting the future. We invite you to do as many of the following as possible: (1) Contribute to JAAL by submitting articles, discussions, reviews, etc. Encourage colleagues to submit their work; (2) Circulate the work of JAAL. As the journal is in an online format, sharing newest titles, early view articles, and social media posts about recent publications elevates the strong work of <i>JAAL</i> authors; (3) Volunteer to review for JAAL and be a part of the process of ensuring expansive work in literacies is made public.</p><p><i>JAAL</i> is at the forefront of advancing inclusive, pluralistic, and emancipatory literacies in the evolving field of literacy. We look forward to engaging collectively with readers, authors, members, and those outside of our fields to be a part of this critically important work (Figure 1).</p><p>\\n <b>Eric Claravall</b>\\n </p><p>Associate Professor in Literacy and Special Education, Teaching Credentials, College of Education, California State University, California.</p><p>Before my position as a university instructor, I was a middle school special education teacher in a culturally diverse school district in northern California. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为《青少年和成人识字杂志》的新编辑,我们很高兴能在这份历史悠久、影响力巨大的杂志的基础上再接再厉。我们感谢之前的编辑团队,Judith Franzek, Koomi Kim, Heather Porter和Matt Sroka,在过去的5年里,他们的编辑工作扩大了JAAL的范围和影响力。我们也要感谢自1995年《阅读杂志》转刊到《JAAL》以来的几位编辑团队,包括凯西·欣奇曼、凯利·钱德勒-奥尔科特、玛格丽特·哈古德和艾米丽·斯金纳,他们塑造了许多读者在青少年和成人识字领域的发展轨迹。此外,我们感谢并尊重在JAAL上发表作品的教育工作者和作为审稿人帮助手稿出版的学者。当我们作为JAAL的共同编辑接受火炬时,我们的目标是从我们自己不同的生活经历,学术途径以及对世界的解释和行动方式中提升集体素养奖学金的精神。作为一个编辑团队,我们的共同追求是扫盲促进公平和正义。在这一期创刊号中,我们将分享我们的愿景,我们共同的承诺,以及我们对日航读者和贡献者的邀请。我们采用多元的观点和全面的理解识字,这是基于一个强大的,以正义为中心的方向。我们的愿景涉及与批判性扫盲相一致的明确目标,例如在扫盲教学、研究、学习和领导方面打破压迫性系统和平衡权力结构。我们认为,JAAL应该继续鼓励有关不断发展的文化多维性的讨论。除了传统的读写技能之外,多元素养的发展还应强调批判性在数字和非数字素养中的作用。世界正在快速发展,我们认识到人工智能和其他创新带来的多模式意义创造的潜力。同样,我们坚定地推动文化可持续教学法和语言响应式教学。我们认为,这些方法放大了有色人种学者和新兴研究人员和实践者的工作,促进了青少年和成人识字方面的生成知识和实践。我们重视多种理论镜头,同时鼓励对识字实践,过程和观点的反思。我们认识到多种学习环境和相互关系,特别关注在地方和全球空间中历史上被排斥和边缘化的教育工作者和社区的贡献和创造力。我们致力于在扫盲、公平和社会正义的交叉点推进研究和实践——将扫盲视为包容性、扩张性、赋权性和实践性。根据教育工作者和研究人员的需求,我们设想JAAL将成为一个揭示差异、破坏压迫性系统、促进对识字的多元化、解放性和变革性理解的空间。我们邀请国际航空协会和非国际航空协会成员更加熟悉日航的长期影响以及影响未来的可能性。我们邀请您尽可能多地做以下事情:(1)通过提交文章、讨论、评论等方式为JAAL做出贡献。鼓励同事提交他们的作品;(2)流通JAAL的工作。由于该期刊采用在线形式,分享最新的标题、早期文章和关于最近出版物的社交媒体帖子提升了JAAL作者的强大工作;(3)自愿为JAAL评审,并成为确保广泛的识字工作公开的过程的一部分。在不断发展的扫盲领域,JAAL处于推进包容性、多元化和解放性扫盲的前沿。我们期待与读者、作者、会员以及我们领域以外的人共同参与这项至关重要的工作(图1)。Eric Claravall,美国加州州立大学教育学院扫盲与特殊教育副教授。在我担任大学讲师之前,我在北加州一个文化多元化的学区担任中学特殊教育教师。我也教过小学从幼儿园到五年级。我的研究主张是通过批判性素养和公民参与来解决社会正义,破坏压迫形式,并拆除教育中的殖民意识形态结构。作为一名菲律宾裔美国移民,我带来了丰富的文化视角和坚韧的精神,这是我从菲律宾来的旅程塑造的。埃里克灯芯草雀。北伊利诺伊大学教育学院课程与教学系学术培养与参与主任、助理教授。 我是一名非裔拉丁裔顺性男性教育者,有12年的高中和社区大学英语教学经验。我的工作重点是培养作为解放、平等和包容工具的读写能力。我的研究探讨了识字和批判性探究如何支持教育机构内的包容性教学法和系统性变革。金贞,美国刘易斯大学扫盲学教授,教育系联合主任。我曾是芝加哥公立学校的高中英语老师和识字教练,是第1.5代的韩裔美国人,是顺性女性、母亲和教育家。长期以来,我一直对种族、代表性和学校、文学和实践中的公平问题感兴趣。我亲眼目睹了排斥和边缘化青年的不公平和压迫制度的后果,因此我的工作重点是在文学和扫盲领域提高包容性和代表性。Jill Castek,亚利桑那大学教学、学习和社会文化研究系教授。作为一名从事读写研究的从业者和读写专家,我在小学和中学与多语种学习者和家庭合作。我的研究素养教师教育的重点是数字素养和多种方式的意义创造。我的工作涉及整个生命周期的成人教育和学习,以鼓励教学,学习和建立社区的全球联系。我支持一生中所有模式和形式的识字学习。我的研究旨在为扫盲研究人员和教育工作者创造团结协作的空间。Michael Manderino,北伊利诺伊大学教育学院课程与教学系副教授。20多年来,我一直在两所规模较大的高中教授和领导扫盲和课程工作,这两所高中的学生主要是黑人和棕色人种的学生和家庭。我的研究重点是学科学习的数字素养,以此来扩展建立和传播知识和思想的意义。通过这些生活经历和我的职位,我致力于为年轻人和他们的家庭争取公平和正义。第二语言习得博士研究生在亚利桑那大学教书。我是一名语言教育家,有几年大学、社区学院和高中的德语和英语教学经验。我的研究重点是出国留学对学习者未来生活的影响,这是我在奥地利和德国学习的经历以及每年夏天在德国领导的留学项目所激发的兴趣。通过我的教学,我的目标是挑战种族化和殖民主义的基础,这些基础促进了德语和英语的传播,促进更公平,批判性的语言学习。泰勒·h·j·弗兰克,亚利桑那大学教学、学习和社会文化研究博士生,华盛顿州温哥华克拉克学院成人基础教育(BEdA)教授。我是一名博士生,也是克洛佛戴尔研究员。我的工作重点是以力量为基础的教育方法,我在整个教学过程中都融入了这种方法。我曾在社区组织和学校担任讲师和导师,教授阅读、写作、数学、GED和英语语言习得。我创造了支持性的空间,让成人学习者可以朝着他们的个人、学术和职业目标努力,发展他们的声音,并找到进一步赋权的途径。我的国际经验遍及秘鲁、南非、马来西亚和加纳,涉及社区发展、商业、教育和非营利部门。作者声明无利益冲突。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Embracing Expansive Literacies: Our Collective Editorial Vision

Embracing Expansive Literacies: Our Collective Editorial Vision

Embracing Expansive Literacies: Our Collective Editorial Vision

Embracing Expansive Literacies: Our Collective Editorial Vision

As the incoming editors of the Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, we are excited to build on the legacy of this longstanding and high-impact journal. We thank the previous editorial team, Judith Franzek, Koomi Kim, Heather Porter, and Matt Sroka, for their editorial work over the past 5 years which has expanded the scope and reach of JAAL. We are also indebted to previous editorial teams since the shift from the Journal of Reading to JAAL in 1995, including Kathy Hinchman and Kelly Chandler-Olcott and Margaret Hagood and Emily Skinner, who have shaped many readers' trajectories in the field of adolescent and adult literacy. Additionally, we appreciate and honor the educators who have published their work in JAAL and scholars who have served as reviewers to help bring manuscripts to publication.

As we receive the torch as JAAL co-editors, we aim to uplift the spirit of collective literacy scholarship from our own diverse lived experiences, academic pathways, and ways of interpreting and acting on the world. As an editorial team, our collective pursuits address literacy for equity and justice. In this inaugural issue, we share our vision, our shared commitments, and our invitations to the readers and contributors of JAAL.

We adopt a pluralistic view and holistic understanding of literacies that is grounded in a strong, justice-focused orientation. Our vision addresses explicit goals aligned with critical literacy, such as disrupting oppressive systems and leveling power structures in literacies teaching, research, learning, and leadership.

We believe that JAAL should continue to encourage discussions about the evolving multidimensional nature of literacies. Beyond traditional reading and writing skills, the advancement of pluralistic literacies should highlight the role of criticality in digital and non-digital literacies. The world is moving at a fast pace, and we recognize the potential of multimodal meaning-making informed by AI and other innovations. Likewise, we steadfastly promote culturally sustaining pedagogies and linguistically responsive teaching. We believe that these approaches amplify the work of scholars of color and emerging researchers and practitioners, fostering generative knowledge and practices in adolescent and adult literacies. We value multiple theoretical lenses while encouraging reflexivity on literacy practices, processes, and perspectives. We recognize multiple learning contexts and inter-relationships with particular attention to the overlooked contributions and ingenuity of educators and communities historically excluded and marginalized across local and global spaces.

We are committed to advancing research and practice at the intersections of literacy, equity, and social justice—embracing literacies as inclusive, expansive, empowering, and grounded in praxis. In alignment with the needs of educators and researchers, we envision JAAL as a space for illuminating disparities, disrupting oppressive systems, and promoting pluralistic, emancipatory, and transformative understandings of literacies.

We invite ILA and non-ILA members alike to become more familiar with the longstanding impact JAAL has had and the possibilities for impacting the future. We invite you to do as many of the following as possible: (1) Contribute to JAAL by submitting articles, discussions, reviews, etc. Encourage colleagues to submit their work; (2) Circulate the work of JAAL. As the journal is in an online format, sharing newest titles, early view articles, and social media posts about recent publications elevates the strong work of JAAL authors; (3) Volunteer to review for JAAL and be a part of the process of ensuring expansive work in literacies is made public.

JAAL is at the forefront of advancing inclusive, pluralistic, and emancipatory literacies in the evolving field of literacy. We look forward to engaging collectively with readers, authors, members, and those outside of our fields to be a part of this critically important work (Figure 1).

Eric Claravall

Associate Professor in Literacy and Special Education, Teaching Credentials, College of Education, California State University, California.

Before my position as a university instructor, I was a middle school special education teacher in a culturally diverse school district in northern California. I also taught in elementary school from kindergarten to fifth grade. My research advocacy is to address social justice, disrupt forms of oppression, and dismantle the structure of colonial ideologies in education through critical literacies and civic engagement. As a Filipino American immigrant, I bring a rich cultural perspective and resilient spirit shaped by my journey from the Philippines.

Eric Junco.

Director for Academic Cultivation and Engagement and Assistant Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction in the College of Education, Northern Illinois University.

I am an Afro-Latino, cis-gender male educator with 12 years of high school and community college English teaching experience. My work centers on cultivating literacy as a tool for liberation, equity, and inclusion. My research explores how literacy and critical inquiry can support inclusive pedagogy and systemic change within educational institutions.

Jung Kim

Professor of Literacy and Co-Chair of the Department of Education at Lewis University.

A former high school English teacher and literacy coach in Chicago Public Schools, I am a 1.5 generation Korean American, cis-gender woman, mother, and educator. I have long been interested in issues of race, representation, and equity in schools, literature, and praxis. Having witnessed firsthand the outcomes of inequitable and oppressive systems that exclude and marginalize youth, my work focuses on greater inclusion and representation in literature and literacy.

Jill Castek

Professor in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Sociocultural Studies, University of Arizona.

I came to literacies research as a practitioner and literacy specialist in elementary and middle schools working with multilingual learners and families. My research literacy teacher education focuses on digital literacies and multiple ways of meaning making. My work addresses adult education and learning across the lifespan to encourage teaching, learning, and global connections for building community. I support literacies learning in all of its modes and forms across the lifespan. My research aims to create spaces for literacies researchers and educators to find solidarity and collaboration.

Michael Manderino

Associate professor in the Curriculum and Instruction Department in the College of Education, Northern Illinois University.

I have taught and led literacy and curricular efforts in two large high schools for over 20 years that serve predominantly Black and Brown students and families. My research focuses on digital literacies for disciplinary learning as ways to expand what it means to build and circulate knowledge and ideas. Through these lived experiences and my positionality, I am committed to the work of equity and justice for young people and their families.

Betsy Carter

PhD candidate in Second Language Acquisition & Teaching at the University of Arizona.

I am a language educator with several years of university, community college, and high school experience teaching German and English. My research focuses on the impacts of study abroad on learners' future lives, an interest sparked by my own experiences studying in Austria and Germany, as well as leading a study abroad program in Germany each summer. Through my teaching, I aim to challenge the racialized and colonial underpinnings that have fostered the spread of both German and English, facilitating more equitable, critical language learning.

Tyler H. J. Frank

PhD student in Teaching, Learning, and Sociocultural Studies at the University of Arizona and Professor in Basic Education for Adults (BEdA) at Clark College in Vancouver, WA.

I am a PhD student and Cloverdell Fellow. My work focuses on strength-based approaches to education, which I have infused throughout my teaching. I have experience working as an instructor and tutor in community organizations and schools, teaching reading, writing, math, GED, and English language acquisition. I create supportive spaces where adult learners can work toward their personal, academic, and career goals, develop their voice, and find paths to further empowerment. My international experience extends across Peru, South Africa, Malaysia, and Ghana in community development, business, education, and non-profit sectors.

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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来源期刊
Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy
Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
11.10%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy is the only literacy journal published exclusively for teachers of older learners. Each issue offers practical, classroom-tested ideas grounded in research and theory. Whether you work with new, struggling, or skilled readers, you’ll find something of interest in JAAL. Every issue includes •Practical ideas for instruction •Reviews of student and teacher resources, including young adult literature •Tips on how to integrate technology, media, and popular culture in your classroom •Reflections on current literacy trends, issues, and research
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