Composing Texts and Identities in an Alternative High School English Class

Author(s):  
Mary Beth Hines ◽  
Michael L. Kersulov ◽  
Leslie Rowland ◽  
Rebecca Rupert

This chapter is drawn from a qualitative case study of one alternative high school English class, tracing students' engagement and resistance with digital media and school-based literacy practices, exploring how each student's use of literacy and digital media led to the formation of particular identities in the social sphere of the classroom. In this chapter the authors focus on two students, Callie--loud and socially dominant-- and Nina, quiet, reserved, outside the social circle. The authors trace the students' respective discursive practices in two composition units-- a multimodal children's book unit and a Theater of the Oppressed unit. The chapter argues that both young women have strong literacy skills and are strategic in using them, thereby creating particular identities as they produced texts.

1985 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 76
Author(s):  
Marion F. Helfrich ◽  
Diana Memos ◽  
Nancy A. Hutchinson ◽  
Sharon Rinderer ◽  
Jeff Fischer ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack Murphy

Hello-- My name is Jack Murphy, and I am a high school English teacher in Chicago. My school is called Truman Middle College, an alternative high school for students 16-21 who have dropped out of public schools and are returning to earn their degree.I am writing both to express my appreciation for this journal, which I have found very useful and inspiring, and also to submit a proposal for 2 possible articles.I have two ideas I would like you to consider: one a short piece on a very successful project I have used in my class and another a longer piece on the nature of working at a school like mine.1. Podcast assignment: a very interesting and successful project I have used in my English class several times now has been a podcast. Students decide whether they want to work on their own, in pairs, or in groups. Each group is challenged to create a podcast segment that connects to the theme Truman Middle College, a la This American Life. The broadness of this theme allows for practically endless variations-- from anodyne issues such as the school bathroom, commutes, and going to school with siblings to deeper issues such as inequality in the school system, student subjugation at the hands of school authority figures, and dealing with Chicago gun violence.The assignment is successful for several reasons, among them 1) student choice in topic 2) a fresh and interesting outlet for the skills and tools we have honed throughout the semester (interviewing, story telling, figurative language, etc), 3) technology such as garageband that students find engaging and useful outside of the classroom (creating the fabulous situation where certain students, often quiet or disengaged, become classroom experts in the program, volunteering to assist and teach others, including their teacher).2. Teaching At An Alternative High School- This could be a longer reflection on the nature of teaching at a school like TMC. The students at my school have all been kicked out of another school, for a wide variety of reasons. We have students who have been incarcerated, students who have children of their own, students who work a fulltime low-wage job in addition to being a fulltime high school student, just to name a few obstacles they face. Our attendance is absolutely atrocious, students are often extremely bitter about schooling in general after a lifetime of bad experiences, and even the most dedicated are often too exhausted, hungry, or depressed to enjoy consistent success. It is at our little school you see the full tyranny of capitalism in full fury, as well as all the conflicting incentives and agendas imposed on teachers by CPS, the charter network, and the high-stakes testing regime. Much effort made by admin or teachers is often in pursuit of good data and other symbols of productivity, at the blatantexpense of the student population.  It is my 5th year as a teacher at this school (and 8th in general, all spent in Chicago) and nothing has done more to radicalize my politics than seeing what these young people are forced to endure on a daily basis.  Thank you for reading. If either of these ideas interest you, please let me know and I can produce the pieces. 


1994 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 450-474 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joan Kernan Cone

Asking how she, as a teacher, can motivate students to discover the joy of reading, Joan Kernan Cone explores students' self-perceptions as "readers" and "non-readers." By engaging her students in this question and through her willingness to respond to their ideas Cone experiments with methods to cultivate "readers" — those who read on their own for pleasure and knowledge. Through the use of student journals, reading materials matching their interest and cultural backgrounds, and group discussion, she inspires a passion for reading. As a result of her in-class research and collaborative reflection with her students, Cone advocates creating a "community of readers" in which students can choose books, read them, talk about them, and encourage each others to read.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 56
Author(s):  
Limei Chen

Most high school English teaching classrooms are instilling knowledge and filling duck teaching led by teachers, ignoring the subjectivity of students. As a result, it dampens students' enthusiasm for learning. Under the background of the new era curriculum reform concept, the classroom interactive teaching mode exerts its unique advantages, greatly mobilizes the enthusiasm of students in learning, changes the single interactive teaching mode, and enhances the interaction and communication between students and teachers. Therefore, this paper analyzes the research and application of classroom interactive teaching mode in high school English teaching.


2019 ◽  
Vol 120 (5/6) ◽  
pp. 285-307
Author(s):  
Chris Proctor ◽  
Paulo Blikstein

PurposeThis research aims to explore how textual literacy and computational literacy can support each other and combine to create literacies with new critical possibilities. It describes the development of a Web application for interactive storytelling and analyzes how its use in a high-school classroom supported new rhetorical techniques and critical analysis of gender and race.Design/methodology/approachThree iterations of design-based research were used to develop a Web application for interactive storytelling, which combines writing with programming. A two-week study in a high-school sociology class was conducted to analyze how the Web application's textual and computational affordances support rhetorical strategies, which in turn support identity authorship and critical possibilities.FindingsThe results include a Web application for interactive storytelling and an analytical framework for analyzing how affordances of digital media can support literacy practices with unique critical possibilities. The final study showed how interactive stories can function as critical discourse models, simulations of social realities which support analysis of phenomena such as social positioning and the use of power.Originality/valuePrevious work has insufficiently spanned the fields of learning sciences and literacies, respectively emphasizing the mechanisms and the content of literacy practices. In focusing a design-based approach on critical awareness of identity, power and privilege, this research develops tools and theory for supporting critical computational literacies. This research envisions a literacy-based approach to K-12 computer science which could contribute to liberatory education.


Author(s):  
Nolan Bazinet

Recent calls for critical education in regards to social and digital media argue for the importance of 21st century media and literacy skills (Butler, 2017; Storksdieck, 2016). These calls join a chorus of academics who have long been calling for the importance of multiliteracy development in education (Cope & Kalantzis, 2000; Lankshear & Knobel, 2011; New London Group, 1996). In searching for texts that may facilitate multiliteracy development, digital games has emerged as an option in formal education, given the complex critical thinking, learning, and literacy practices they can afford (Beavis, O'Mara, & McNeice, 2012; Gee, 2007; Squire, 2008; Steinkhueler, 2010). The chapter explores the multiliterate affordances when using digital literature and digital games at an English language college in Quebec. Results show that the implications of using digital games to engender multiliteracy development are substantive.


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