@家庭集体(ly):打开大门,与识字演员一起读书

IF 1.3 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Christy Wessel‐Powell, Beth A. Buchholz, Jason D. DeHart, Elizabeth M. Frye, Devery Ward, Sarah M. Vander Zanden, Elizabeth Campbell
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引用次数: 2

摘要

尽管与世隔绝,但封锁也为建立联系和灵感创造了意想不到的机会。这篇文章描述了兄弟姐妹Marco和Mara在为Literacy Cast写数字文本/书籍时的封锁文学,Literacy Cast是阿巴拉契亚州立大学从2020年3月至今提供的一个虚拟互动识字空间。自封锁开始以来,这个虚拟空间每周实施4-5天,70-250名参与者从“家”登录,共同构建一个多代、多语言、地理分散的社区,参与阅读、写作/作曲、制作、演讲和聆听。Literacy Cast是由教师、实验学校教师、研究生级别的教师候选人以及K-5年级的儿童(和家庭)共同设想、构建和实施的。我们听到了很多关于虚拟教室/学习的局限性(例如,新冠肺炎“学习损失”、缺乏参与、机会不平等),特别是与历史上被边缘化的社区有关,但我们很少提供相反的叙述:例如,在这些社区生活和上学的幼儿通过在家里进行明显有意义的识字/语言实践、文化文物和人,塑造了新的虚拟空间/场所的创建。通过嵌入Literacy Cast数字书架上共享的多模式文本/书籍中的邀请,孩子们将社区带入了他们的家——卧室、厨房、后院、后廊和后座,重构“家访”是新型社区知识生产的场所/活动。关于家访的研究,即教育工作者访问学生家了解儿童生活的研究,记录了家庭环境意识对学校互动的影响,改善了照顾者和教师之间的关系,通常侧重于支持学校成绩和学校的干预实践,通常是从学校到家的单向流动;然而,我们将Literacy Cast的日常活动概念化为多方向的“家访”,邀请他们一起玩耍、阅读和写作,促成了关系,并加强了所有参与者的各种识字实践。通过合作民族志,我们探索“家”(例如,物体/人/实践/语言/事件)如何成为儿童数字创作/制作的工具/合著者,并最终成为家庭/社区制作的工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
@Home collective(ly): Opening doors and doing books with literacy-cast
Although isolating, lockdown also created unexpected opportunities for connection and inspiration. This article describes the lockdown literacies of a sibling pair, Marco and Mara, as they wrote digital texts/books for Literacy-Cast, a virtual, interactive literacy space offered by Appalachian State University from March 2020-present. Since lockdown began, this virtual space has been enacted 4-5 days weekly with 70-250 participants logging in from “home” to co-construct a multigenerational, multilingual, geographically-dispersed community engaged in reading, writing/composing, making, speaking, and listening. Literacy-Cast was imagined, built, and enacted collaboratively among faculty, laboratory school teachers, graduate-level teacher candidates, and children (and families) in grades K-5. We hear a lot about the limitations of virtual classrooms/learning (e.g., COVID “learning loss,” lack of engagement, unequal access), particularly in relation to historically marginalized communities, but rarely are we offered counter-narratives: examples where young children who live and go to school in these communities shaped the creation of new virtual spaces/places by making visible meaningful “at home” literacy/language practices, cultural artifacts, and people. Through invitations embedded in the multimodal texts/books shared on Literacy-Cast’s digital bookshelf, children brought the community into their homes–bedrooms, kitchens, backyards, back porches, and backseats, reframing “home visits'' as sites/events for new kinds of community knowledge production. Research about home visits, educators visiting students’ homes to learn about children’s lives, has documented the impact of home environment awareness on school interactions, improved relationships between caregivers and teachers, typically focused on intervention supporting school-based achievement and school practices, often with unidirectional flow from school-to-home; however we conceptualize Literacy-Cast’s daily activity as multidirectional “home visits,” where invitations to come over and play, read, and write together brokered relationships and strengthened a gamut of literacy practices for all participants. Through collaborative ethnography, we explore ways “home” (e.g., objects/people/practices/languages/events) became tools/co-authors for children’s digital composing/making and, ultimately, home/community-making.
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来源期刊
Journal of Early Childhood Literacy
Journal of Early Childhood Literacy EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
12.50%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: Journal of Early Childhood Literacy is a fully peer-reviewed international journal. Since its foundation in 2001 JECL has rapidly become a distinctive, leading voice in research in early childhood literacy, with a multinational range of contributors and readership. The main emphasis in the journal is on papers researching issues related to the nature, function and use of literacy in early childhood. This includes the history, development, use, learning and teaching of literacy, as well as policy and strategy. Research papers may address theoretical, methodological, strategic or applied aspects of early childhood literacy and could be reviews of research issues. JECL is both a forum for debate about the topic of early childhood literacy and a resource for those working in the field. Literacy is broadly defined; JECL focuses on the 0-8 age range. Our prime interest in empirical work is those studies that are situated in authentic or naturalistic settings; this differentiates the journal from others in the area. JECL, therefore, tends to favour qualitative work but is also open to research employing quantitative methods. The journal is multi-disciplinary. We welcome submissions from diverse disciplinary backgrounds including: education, cultural psychology, literacy studies, sociology, anthropology, historical and cultural studies, applied linguistics and semiotics.
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