Literacies Learning and the Body

Literacies  Learning  and the Body
Author: Grace Enriquez,Elisabeth Johnson,Stavroula Kontovourki,Christine A. Mallozzi
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2015-10-16
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781317443544

Download Literacies Learning and the Body Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The essays, research studies, and pedagogical examples in this book provide a window into the embodied dimensions of literacy and a toolbox for interpreting, building on, and inquiring into the range of ways people communicate and express themselves as literate beings. The contributors investigate and reflect on the complexities of embodied literacies, honoring literacy learners and teachers as they holistically engage with texts in complex sociopolitical, historical, and cultural contexts. Considering these issues within a multiplicity of education spaces and literacy events inside and outside of institutional contexts, the book offers a fresh lens and rhetoric with which to address literacy education policies, giving readers a discursive repertoire necessary to develop and defend responsive curricula within an increasingly high-stakes, standardized schooling climate.

Literacy Power and the Schooled Body

Literacy  Power  and the Schooled Body
Author: Kerryn Dixon
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2010-11-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781136969744

Download Literacy Power and the Schooled Body Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

What effects do space and time have on classroom management, discipline, and regulation? How do teachers’ practices create schooled and literate students? To explore these questions, this book looks at early childhood classrooms, charting the shifts and continuities as four-year-old children begin preschool, move from preschool into primary school, and come to the end of the first phase of schooling at nine years. The literacy classroom is used as a specific site in which to examine how children’s bodies are disciplined to become literate. This is not a book that theorizes space, time, discipline, bodies, and literacy in abstract ways. Rather, working from a Foucaultian premise that discipline is directed onto children’s bodies, it moves from theory to practice. Photographs, lesson transcripts, interviews, and children’s work show how teachers’ practices are enacted on children’s bodies in time and space. In this way, teachers are offered practical examples from which to think about their own classrooms and classroom practice, and to reflect on what works, why it works, and what can be changed.

Literacies Learning and the Body

Literacies  Learning  and the Body
Author: Grace Enriquez,Elisabeth Johnson,Stavroula Kontovourki,Christine A. Mallozzi
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2015-10-16
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781317443537

Download Literacies Learning and the Body Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The essays, research studies, and pedagogical examples in this book provide a window into the embodied dimensions of literacy and a toolbox for interpreting, building on, and inquiring into the range of ways people communicate and express themselves as literate beings. The contributors investigate and reflect on the complexities of embodied literacies, honoring literacy learners and teachers as they holistically engage with texts in complex sociopolitical, historical, and cultural contexts. Considering these issues within a multiplicity of education spaces and literacy events inside and outside of institutional contexts, the book offers a fresh lens and rhetoric with which to address literacy education policies, giving readers a discursive repertoire necessary to develop and defend responsive curricula within an increasingly high-stakes, standardized schooling climate.

English and Literacies

English and Literacies
Author: Robyn Ewing,Siobhan O'Brien,Kathy Rushton,Lucy Stewart,Rachel Burke,Deb Brosseuk
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 441
Release: 2022-02-18
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781009154031

Download English and Literacies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

English and Literacies introduces pre-service teachers to the many facets of literacies and English education for primary students.

Handbook of Research on Bilingual and Intercultural Education

Handbook of Research on Bilingual and Intercultural Education
Author: Gómez-Parra, María Elena,Huertas Abril, Cristina Aránzazu
Publsiher: IGI Global
Total Pages: 550
Release: 2020-03-27
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781799825890

Download Handbook of Research on Bilingual and Intercultural Education Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

As education becomes more globally accessible, the need increases for comprehensive education options with a special focus on bilingual and intercultural education. The normalization of diversity and the acclimation of the students to various cultures and types of people are essential for success in the current world. The Handbook of Research on Bilingual and Intercultural Education is an essential scholarly publication that provides comprehensive empirical research on bilingual and intercultural processes in an educational context. Featuring a range of topics such as education policy, language resources, and teacher education, this book is ideal for teachers, instructional designers, curriculum developers, language learning professionals, principals, administrators, academicians, policymakers, researchers, and students.

Affect Embodiment and Place in Critical Literacy

Affect  Embodiment  and Place in Critical Literacy
Author: Kimberly Lenters,Mairi McDermott
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2019-08-22
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780429648236

Download Affect Embodiment and Place in Critical Literacy Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book explores the impact of sensation, affect, ethics, and place on literacy learning from early childhood through to adult education. Chapters bridge the divide between theory and practice to consider how contemporary teaching and learning can promote posthuman values and perspectives. By offering a posthuman approach to literacy research and pedagogy, Affect, Embodiment, and Place in Critical Literacy re-works the theory-practice divide in literacy education, to emphasize the ways in which learning is an affective and embodied process merging in a particular environment. Written by literacy educators and international literacy researchers, this volume is divided into four sections focussing on: Moving with sensation and affect; becoming worldmakers with ethics and difference; relationships that matter in curriculum and place; before drawing together everything in a concise conclusion. Affect, Embodiment, and Place in Critical Literacy is the perfect resource for researchers, academics, and postgraduate students in the fields of literacy education and philosophy of education, as well as those seeking to explore the benefits of a posthumanism approach when conceptualising theory and practice in literacy education.

Embodied Literacies

Embodied Literacies
Author: Kristie S. Fleckenstein
Publsiher: SIU Press
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2003
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780809325269

Download Embodied Literacies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Embodied Literacies: Imageword and a Poetics of Teaching is a response to calls to enlarge the purview of literacy to include imagery in its many modalities and various facets. Kristie S. Fleckenstein asserts that all meaning, linguistic or otherwise, is a result of the transaction between image and word. She implements the concept of imageword—a mutually constitutive fusion of image and word—to reassess language arts education and promote a double vision of reading and writing. Utilizing an accessible fourfold structure, she then applies the concept to the classroom, reconfiguring what teachers do when they teach, how they teach, what they teach with, and how they teach ethically. Fleckenstein does not discount the importance of text in the quest for literacy. Instead, she places the language arts classroom and teacher at the juncture of image and word to examine the ways imagery enables and disables the teaching of and the act of reading and writing. Learning results from the double play of language and image, she argues. Helping teachers and students dissolve the boundaries between text and image, the volume outlines how to see reading and writing as something more than words and language and to disestablish our definitions of literacy as wholly linguistic. Embodied Literacies: Imageword and a Poetics of Teaching comes at a critical time in our cultural history. Echoing the opinion that postmodernity is a product of imagery rather than textuality, Fleckenstein argues that we must evolve new literacies when we live in a culture saturated by images on computer screens, televisions, even billboards. Decisively and clearly, she demonstrates the importance of incorporating imagery—which is inextricably linked to our psychological, social, and textual lives—into our epistemologies and literacy teaching.

Literacies Power and the Schooled Body

Literacies  Power  and the Schooled Body
Author: Kerryn Dixon
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 195
Release: 2010-11-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781136969751

Download Literacies Power and the Schooled Body Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The literacy classroom is the foundation from which reading and writing is built for use across the curriculum. This book focuses on the body and uses literacy as a way of exploring how teachers' practices create literate students. Working from a Foucaultian premise that discipline is directed onto children's bodies.