以学习者为中心:识字身份与识字教育

IF 1.4 2区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
E. Bauer, Catherine Compton-Lilly, Guofang Li, Aria Razfar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

识字身份是本卷文章的核心,作者在文章中质疑传统和历史的识字教育方法。缺陷模型不可避免地将文学作品种族化,同时以(男性)白人为中心,使学习者及其经历体面化。正如本文所述,识字教育的几乎每个方面都受到赤字观点的影响:测试和评估、教师教育、学生参与和课堂实践都会使学生及其家庭的赤字观点长期存在。本卷中的作者利用实证研究提出了实用的教学工具,使识字教育工作者摆脱教育和教学的赤字和债务模式。通过这样做,识字的身份并没有被种族边缘化,非白人学生是以中心而非其他人为中心的。在这本书中,我们开始回答这样一个问题:反种族主义、反赤字的扫盲教育可以是什么样子,也应该是什么样子?在“通往识字身份的门户时刻”中,Enright、Wong和Sanchez研究了少数族裔高中生的识字身份。虽然赤字模型在种族上边缘化了有色人种学生的识字身份,但权威的识字身份以学习者及其身份、语言和语言库为中心。这些作者断言,教师必须做出拒绝前者、促进后者的教学选择。Ascenzi Moreno和Seltzer在他们的文章《永远在底层:评估新兴双语者的意识形态》中,使用跨语言和种族主义的视角来探索多语言资源在评估新兴双语学生阅读成绩中的作用。虽然评估对初出茅庐的双语者来说可能会有问题,但对有色人种的语言学习者来说尤其令人担忧。因此,作者得出结论,现有的阅读评估是种族化的,并呼吁开发无偏见的评估工具。在《感觉如何支持学生的文学课堂讨论》一书中,Levine、Trepper、Chung和Coehlo对情感评估进行了研究,这是一种自我评估形式,读者可以在其中反思自己对文本的反应。当部署在高中课堂上时,情感讨论和自我评价会让学生超越“一个正确的答案”,参与更广泛的解释和更深思熟虑的讨论,将学习者置于机构之上。Sciurba的《2020年黑人青年诗歌与重塑文学》将批判性识字视角应用于学生诗歌的话语分析。在这项研究中,黑人青年的诗歌作为一种手段来处理总体上的反黑人行为,特别是与警务实践的关系。Sciurba提供最佳社论
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Centering Learners: Literate Identities and Literacy Education
Literate identities are central to the articles presented in this volume, in which contributors interrogate traditional and historical approaches to literacy education. Deficit models inevitably racialize literacies while centering (male) whiteness and decentering learners and their experiences. As the pieces herein illustrate, nearly every aspect of literacy education is affected by deficit perspectives: Testing and assessment, teacher education, student engagement, and classroom practice can all perpetuate deficit views of students and their families. The authors whose work is included in this volume use empirical research to propose practical pedagogical tools that move literacy educators away from deficit and debt models of education and instruction. In so doing, literate identities are not racially marginalized, and nonwhite students are centered rather than othered. Across this volume, we begin to answer the question, What can and should anti-racist, anti-deficit literacy education look like? In “Gateway Moments to Literate Identities,” Enright, Wong, and Sanchez examine literate identities among minoritized high school students. While deficit models racially marginalize the literate identities of Students of color, authoritative literate identities center learners and their identities, languages, and linguistic repertoires. These authors assert that teachers must make instructional choices that reject the former and promote the latter. In their article, “Always at the Bottom: Ideologies in Assessment of Emergent Bilinguals,” Ascenzi-Moreno and Seltzer use translanguaging and raciolinguistic lenses to explore the role of multilingual resources in assessing the reading achievement of emergent bilingual students. While assessment can be problematic for emergent bilinguals in general, they are particularly fraught for Language Learners of color. The authors therefore conclude that existing reading assessments are racialized and call for the development of unbiased assessment tools. In “How Feeling Supports Students’ Classroom Discussions of Literature,” Levine, Trepper, Chung, and Coehlo take on affective evaluation—a form of self-assessment in which readers reflect on their own responses to texts. When deployed in high school classrooms, affective discussions and self-evaluation move students beyond “one right answer” to engage with broader interpretations and more thoughtful discussions that center learners over institutions. Sciurba’s “Black Youth Poetry of 2020 and Reimagined Literacies” applies a critical literacy lens to a discourse analysis of student-written poetry. In this study, the poetry of a Black youth serves as a means to process anti-Blackness in general and in relation to policing practices specifically. Sciurba concludes by offering best Editorial
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: The Journal of Literacy Research (JLR) is a peer-reviewed journal contributes to the advancement research related to literacy and literacy education. Current focuses include, but are not limited to: -Literacies from preschool to adulthood -Evolving and expanding definitions of ‘literacy’ -Innovative applications of theory, pedagogy and instruction -Methodological developments in literacy and language research
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