Music and Mobile Phones

Author(s):  
Angela Tudor

In a discussion of student behaviors, the author considers the affordances of mobile phones in the English language arts (ELA) classroom. The author believes that mobile phones establish a private, first space where students interact both socially and academically as they appear as audience/observers and agents/creators. In addition to practical affordances, the author discusses social-emotional aspects of mobile phones as they have become part of students' first space, representing both culture and identity. The author believes that music, which exists in students' private first spaces, affords teachers an opportunity to establish and engage students in a neutral third space where meaning and knowing occur without scripts or strategies but rather curiosity, respect, and connection. The author also provides vignettes of practical implementation of digital literacies.

Author(s):  
Hannah O. Ajayi ◽  
Johnson O. Okewole ◽  
Joshua O. Salami

The study explored the use of mobile phones by the early childhood teachers of English language arts (ELA) in Nigeria. Descriptive survey design was used using an online survey to assess early childhood teachers' use of the mobile phone in their classrooms. Ninety-eight teachers who responded to the instrument online formed the sample for the study. The instrument entitled Mobile Phones in ELA Classrooms' Questionnaire (MP-ELA-CQ) was used to collect data for the study. Data were analyzed using percentage and Pearson Moment Correlation Coefficients. Results indicated that teachers—both preservice and in-service—need regular training in technology and education to help them effectively utilize mobile phones in their classrooms.


2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 303-316
Author(s):  
Keisha L. Green ◽  
Daniel Morales Morales ◽  
Chrystal George Mwangi ◽  
Genia M. Bettencourt

Purpose This paper aims to focus on the construction of a third space within a high school. Specifically, the authors consider how youth of color engage the educational context of an 11th grade English language arts (ELA) class as a basis for (re)imagining their history, culture and themselves to construct counter-narratives away from framing their lived educational experiences as failures, deficient and depicted in “damage-centered” (Tuck, 2009) ways. The research engages the process and challenges of creating this type of space within a school setting, as well as examining the ways in which students envision these locations. Design/methodology/approach Critical ethnography centered the emphasis on youth engagement for social change, as well as the inquiry on how the classroom space was constructed, shared and navigated by the students and ourselves (Madison, 2005). In addition, the research design reflects critical ethnography through the use of prolonged participation in the field (nine and half months), a focus on culture (specifically school and classroom culture/climate) and a critical theory-based framework [hybridity, third space and youth participatory action research (YPAR)]. Findings Three major themes emerged from the data that demonstrate how instructors and students collectively engaged in a third space through the YPAR project. These themes include developing an ethic of care with students and among instructors, cultivating an atmosphere of social justice awareness and the contrast of the classroom space with the wider-Hillside Vocational High School environment. Originality/value The study engages the use of YPAR within a high school class that became a unique space for students to learn and develop. The ELA class did not just reflect adding the first space and second space together or merging the two. Instead, it seemed to demonstrate the creation of a new type of space or the development of a third space. In this space, students could bring and bridge their out-of-school and in-school experiences to develop new knowledge and ways of seeing the world.


2021 ◽  
pp. 074171362199151
Author(s):  
Ekaterina Tour ◽  
Edwin Creely ◽  
Peter Waterhouse

A strength-based approach to teaching digital literacies can advance language education for adults from refugee and migrant backgrounds, preparing them for life in a new country. This article draws on a 6-month ethnographic study at an adult English language center in Australia and explores teachers’ perspectives and practices related to teaching digital literacies to understand how prepared they are to employ learners’ own resources. Using sociomaterial theory, this research found that English as an Additional Language (EAL) teachers’ narratives about learners focused on what they lacked rather than what they brought to learning. It also found that while teaching practices utilized some strength-based pedagogical principles, the teachers viewed their work as being deficient. They did not always recognize their agential power nor did they overtly understand that the technology itself afforded this power. The article concludes with implications for EAL practice and professional learning of teachers who work in the adult sector.


1999 ◽  
Vol 88 (4) ◽  
pp. 27
Author(s):  
René Matthews ◽  
Maria Conti Mingrone ◽  
Leah A. Zuidema ◽  
Elizabeth G. Mascia ◽  
Gracie Conway Panousis ◽  
...  

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