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E-raamat: Argument as Dialogue Across Difference: Engaging Youth in Public Literacies

  • Formaat: 178 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Nov-2016
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317214403
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  • Formaat: 178 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Nov-2016
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317214403

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In the spirit of models of argument starting with inquiry, this book starts with a question: What might it mean to teach argument in ways that open up spaces for change—changes of mind, changes of practice and policy, changes in ways of talking and relating? The author explores teaching argument in ways that take into account the complexities and pluralities young people face as they attempt to enact local and global citizenship with others who may reasonably disagree. The focus is foremost on social action—the hard, hopeful work of finding productive ways forward in contexts where people need to work together across difference to get something worthwhile done.

Arvustused

"I can think of no more timely, moral, and smart approach to literacy in and out of school than Jennifer Cliftons new book. Unless we humans learn to discuss critical issues with each other across differences in a joint journey, not to conversion, but to a better shared world, there may soon be no livable world left for us."

James Paul Gee, Mary Lou Fulton Presidential Professor of Literacy Studies and Regents Professor, Arizona State University, USA

"The ideas in this book completely transformed my perspective as an argument writing teacher. My students now view conflict as more than a two-sided philosophical battle of little interest or relevance. Rather than solving hypothetical problems by choosing the 'right' stance, they engage with community stakeholders to enact real change. Their flexibility in critically weighing complex issues results in their being better equipped to grapple with the complexities of the adult world."

Julie Sheerman, Co-Director, Missouri Writing Project, Teacher Consultant, Marceline High School, Missouri, USA

"Jennifer Cliftons ideas should provoke teachers of argumentationthat is, all English, debate, and composition teachersto rethink the nature of argument as well as their purposes and practices for teaching it. In thoughtful, but accessible prose that invites readers into dialogue, Clifton unpacks a theoretical and practice based stance that veers from the polarization so evident in contemporary society and instead offers innovative ways to engage wide-ranging perspectives within ever changing and diverse contexts."

Bob Fecho, Professor of English Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, USA

"Clifton offers a theoretically rich and beautifully felt account of why we must teach argument as a means of positive social change in secondary through university classrooms. As Clifton notes, the stakes could not be higher, from police brutality and wage disparities, to marriage rights and access to clean water; how youth learn to argue together is fundamentally about crafting more equitable futures. Necessary reading for all of us who teach and study literacies, composition, and justice."

Django Paris . Associate Professor, College of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Michigan State University, USA

List of Figures
ix
List of Interludes: Engaging Youth in Public Literacies
x
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(17)
Argument and Public Life
3(3)
Limitations as Sites of Knowledge Building
6(4)
But Why Public Literacies?
10(3)
What to Expect From This Book
13(5)
1 Provisional Knowing and the Need for Argument
18(20)
Rationalities, Reasonabilities, and Power
18(4)
Cultivating Argument
22(2)
Deliberative Publics and Argument as Dialogue Across Difference
24(8)
Argument and Contingent Knowledge-Building
32(6)
2 Dynamic and Distributed Argument: Youth and Contemporary Public Life
38(36)
Part I Current Models of Argument Instruction
38(5)
Part II Recurring Social Practices and Distributed Arguments
43(1)
Conceptualizing Argument Beyond a Text Type
43(9)
Genres as Social Action
45(1)
Genre Ecologies as Distributed and Distributing Arguments
46(6)
Part III Distributed Arguments and Contemporary Public Life
52(1)
Conceptualizing Public Life Under Contemporary Conditions
52(6)
Neoliberalism and the Erosion of Polity
54(3)
Youth Lives and Neoliberalism
57(1)
Re-imagining Polity Under Contemporary Conditions
58(1)
Re-imagining the Commons Under Contemporary Conditions
59(5)
Distributed Arguments, Life-World Disturbances, and the Beginnings of Public Life
64(10)
3 Constructing Shared Concerns and Alternative Practices of Argument in Public Life
74(47)
Critical Bifocality
75(4)
Attending to Public and Yet-to-Be-Public Concerns
79(10)
Listening Across Difference
79(3)
Listening for Public and Yet-to-Be-Public Concerns
82(7)
Public Listening for Critical Incidents
89(2)
Conceptualizing Critical Incidents
91(9)
Personal Constructions of Critical Incidents
94(3)
Composite Critical Incident
97(2)
Co-constructions of Critical Incidents
99(1)
Critical Re-imagining
100(2)
Valuing Multiple Perspectives: Reframing Points of Stasis
102(3)
Writing and Invention: Constructing and Coordinating Social Practices of Argument
105(5)
Co-constructing Textual Conventions for Inventive Social Practices
110(3)
But Is This Argument?
113(8)
4 Argument as Dialogue Across Difference: The Praxis of Public Life
121(37)
Globalization, Wicked Problems, and Public Life
127(4)
Addressing the Complexities of Wicked Problems With Youth
131(4)
Practical Acting--Knowing and Practical Wisdom
135(4)
Argument as Dialogue Across Difference: The Praxis of Public Life
139(4)
The Need for Rough Ground: Experience, Uncertainty, and Consequences
143(15)
Index 158
Jennifer Clifton is Assistant Professor, Department of English (Rhetoric and Writing Studies), The University of Texas at El Paso, USA.