识字的再概念化:音频识字叙事的实验和游戏

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Kara Poe Alexander
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引用次数: 0

摘要

识字即成功的神话在以印刷品为基础的识字叙事中很普遍,但学生们如何在印刷品之外的模式中与这种占主导地位的神话联系起来仍然未知。为了了解更多关于学生如何在非印刷模式下描述识字能力的信息,我分析了将论文上传到识字数字档案馆的学生的170个音频识字叙事(ALN)。研究结果表明,学生们忽视了识字是成功的神话,而是将识字视为一个持续的、流动的实验、社区联系和游戏过程。学生们提倡识字不是一个终点,而是一个发明和重塑自我的地方,并重新思考以前对识字的定义。他们还利用创造性和创新性的创作方法,不仅拓展了识字叙事类型,还促进了对识字生活的重新想象。最终,音频识字叙事提供了一种宝贵的手段,可以打破识字神话,促进对识字发展的更广泛理解,从而培养好奇心、创造力和发明力。因此,这是写作课堂上的一项重要作业。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reconceptualizing literacy: Experimentation and play in audio literacy narratives

The literacy-as-success myth is prevalent in print-based literacy narratives but how students relate to this dominant myth in modes beyond print is still unknown. To learn more about how students characterize literacy in a non-print-based mode, I analyzed 170 audio literacy narratives (ALNs) from students who uploaded their essay to the Digital Archives of Literacy. Findings show that students ignore the literacy-as-success myth and instead offer a capacious view of literacy as an ongoing, fluid process of experimentation, communal connection, and play. Students promote literacy not as an end point but rather as a place to invent and reinvent oneself and to rethink previously held definitions of literacy. They also utilize creative and innovative composing approaches that not only expand the literacy narrative genre but also facilitate reimagination of their literate lives. Ultimately, audio literacy narratives provide a valuable means to disrupting the literacy myth and promoting a more expansive understanding of literacy development that breeds curiosity, creativity, and invention. As a result, it is an important assignment in writing classrooms.

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来源期刊
Computers and Composition
Computers and Composition Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
审稿时长
25 days
期刊介绍: Computers and Composition: An International Journal is devoted to exploring the use of computers in writing classes, writing programs, and writing research. It provides a forum for discussing issues connected with writing and computer use. It also offers information about integrating computers into writing programs on the basis of sound theoretical and pedagogical decisions, and empirical evidence. It welcomes articles, reviews, and letters to the Editors that may be of interest to readers, including descriptions of computer-aided writing and/or reading instruction, discussions of topics related to computer use of software development; explorations of controversial ethical, legal, or social issues related to the use of computers in writing programs.
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