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Go Be a Writer!: Expanding the Curricular Boundaries of Literacy Learning with Children [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 226x154x15 mm, kaal: 369 g
  • Sari: Language & Literacy Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Apr-2016
  • Kirjastus: Teachers' College Press
  • ISBN-10: 0807757748
  • ISBN-13: 9780807757741
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 226x154x15 mm, kaal: 369 g
  • Sari: Language & Literacy Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Apr-2016
  • Kirjastus: Teachers' College Press
  • ISBN-10: 0807757748
  • ISBN-13: 9780807757741

Go Be a Writer! provides an introduction to poststructural and posthumanist theories in order to imagine new possibilities for expanding literacy education. The authors put these theories to work in the context of an elementary school classroom, examining literacy-based activities that occur as students participate with materials in a multimedia writers’ studio. Focusing on literacy processes, the book emphasizes the fluid and sometimes unintentional ways multimodal artifacts come into being through intra-actions with human and nonhuman materials. Because these theories emphasize the unplanned, nonlinear aspects of literacy, the authors demonstrate an approach to literacy that works against the grain of standardization and rigid curricular models. Go Be a Writer! reveals that when educators appreciate the value of unscripted intra-actions, they allow for more authentic learning.

Book Features:

  • Allows educators to imagine news ways of thinking, teaching, and researching about texts in schools.
  • Embraces entangled literacy practices that involve materials, time, and space.
  • Demonstrates a long-term teacher/researcher partnership, including data from four years of teaching.
  • Disrupts traditional forms and standards of academic texts, experimenting with new ways of writing.
Foreword xiii
Jennifer Rowsell
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xxv
Introduction 1(21)
Purposes of this Book
2(2)
Literacy Desiring
4(2)
Why Not Sociocultural and/or New Literacy Studies Perspectives?
6(9)
Literacy Desiring: Shifting to an Ethico-Onto-Epistemological Perspective
15(2)
Writing with Theories
17(2)
Overview of Book
Chapters
19(3)
1 Paradigmatic and Pedagogical Shifts: Literacy Desiring
22(10)
Poststructural and Posthumanist (Re)presentation of Riley/Frog
22(4)
Poststructural and Posthumanist Theories: Paradigmatic Shifts
26(4)
Enchantment with Possibilities and Potentialities: "Explod[ ing] the Entire Educational System"
30(2)
2 Poststructural and Posthumanist Theories: What Do They Produce in Writers' Studio?
32(21)
Poststructural Ideas
32(7)
Posthumanist Ideas
39(8)
Theory ← → Methodology ← → Pedagogy
47(6)
3 Living Out Theories as Pedagogy: Teaching ← → Learning in Room 203
53(16)
Flattening Room 203
54(1)
Space
55(5)
Time
60(2)
Materials
62(3)
Language
65(2)
Trust and Permission
67(2)
4 Intra-active Writing With/Through Daily News
69(16)
Elza and Raisa: Body Survey of Ice Cream Flavors
71(4)
Joe and Bethany: Football Web
75(5)
Nick: Scavenger Hunt Mystery
80(3)
What Did Daily News Produce?
83(2)
5 Nonfiction Writing and Animal Research
85(26)
Nonfiction Land of Room 203: A Game
86(2)
Bye Bye Birdies Game: Research About the Not So Friendly Relationship Between Cats and Birds
88(9)
How-to Video: Making Seasonal Snowflakes
97(6)
How-to Videos: Making Recipes
103(5)
What Did Nonfiction Writing and Animal Research Produce?
108(3)
6 Personal Narratives and Writing for Personal Interests
111(34)
What Writing Cycle?
113(12)
Personal Narratives and Rhizomatic Writing Processes
125(17)
What Did Personal Narrative and Writing for Personal Interests Produce?
142(3)
7 Fiction and Series Writing
145(2)
Gigi
145(2)
21 Minus 1 Days Earlier from Gigi's Night Writing
147(13)
Three Perspectives
149(6)
What Did Fiction and Series Writing Produce?
155(5)
8 Underneath the Large Noisy Events: The Absent Presence Writing
160(32)
Plastic Cube Cities, All Over Floor
161(5)
Paper Airplane Tournament
166(6)
Tree Markings: Somebody Is Coming!
172(5)
Skateboard Park with Paper Skateboards
177(7)
Naming the School Hallways: "To Make a Creative Difference"
184(3)
What Did Absent Presence Writing, Underneath the Large Noisy Events, Produce?
187(5)
9 Planning in Order to Be Flexible: Creating Spaces for Literacy Desiring
192(15)
End of the School Year, May, a Conference with Neil During Writers' Studio
192(2)
Literacy Desiring: But What About Standards?
194(2)
Emergent Listening: Being and Becoming with Children/Materials/Time/Space
196(2)
Constituting Habits: Emergent Becomings of Tara and Candace
198(5)
Ethico-Onto-Epistemology
203(1)
Becoming Anew
204(1)
Appendix: Illustrative Examples of Poststructural and Posthumanist Concepts
205(2)
References 207(8)
Index 215(8)
About the Authors 223
Candace R. Kuby is assistant professor of early childhood education at the University of Missouri. Tara Gutshall Rucker is a public elementary school teacher in Columbia, Missouri.