Which New Literacies? Dialogue and Performance in Youth Writing

Measurements of literacy learning in schools, the authors argue, have settled into static and individualized understandings of what should be the most invigorating and social aspect of schooling for youth. By contrast, this article explores the place of aesthetic, dialogic, and performative forms of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of adolescent & adult literacy 2011-02, Vol.54 (5), p.322-330
Hauptverfasser: Gallagher, Kathleen, Ntelioglou, Burcu Yaman
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container_title Journal of adolescent & adult literacy
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creator Gallagher, Kathleen
Ntelioglou, Burcu Yaman
description Measurements of literacy learning in schools, the authors argue, have settled into static and individualized understandings of what should be the most invigorating and social aspect of schooling for youth. By contrast, this article explores the place of aesthetic, dialogic, and performative forms of literacy in the adolescent classroom by excavating ethnographic data from an urban multicultural high school. Close examination of student writing, field notes, and teacher interviews illustrates how the space of the drama classroom creates a laboratory for experimentation with many forms of “new literacies” through rich engagements with the lives inside and the worlds beyond the classroom. The authors reason that drama pedagogies are both creative and critical forms of literacy that offer empirical weight to newer theories of literacy and lead to new modes of theorizing the multiple acts of literacy in schools.
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source Wiley-Blackwell Journals; JSTOR Complete Journals
subjects adolescence
Adolescents
Aesthetics
Classrooms
Communication
Communication (Thought Transfer)
Creative writing
Creativity
Cultural differences
Drama
Educational Facilities Improvement
Educational Researchers
Emergent Literacy
Ethnography
High School Students
High Schools
Interviews
Language diversity
learner
Linguistics
Literacy
Literary criticism
literature
Mass Media
Monologues
motivation
oral language
Pedagogy
Politics
Prior Learning
Reading Ability
Researchers
strategies
struggling
Student Attitudes
Student Diversity
Student Experience
Teachers
Teaching Methods
Theater
topic
type
Urban Schools
Vocational Schools
writing
Writing (Composition)
Writing Instruction
Written narratives
Youth
title Which New Literacies? Dialogue and Performance in Youth Writing
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