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E-raamat: Transforming Language and Literacy Education: New Materialism, Posthumanism, and Ontoethics [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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  • Formaat: 198 pages, 31 Halftones, black and white; 31 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jun-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780429491702
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 189,26 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 270,37 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 198 pages, 31 Halftones, black and white; 31 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jun-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780429491702

The field of languages and literacies education is undergoing rapid transformation. Scholarship that draws upon feminist, post-colonial, new material and posthuman ontologies is transcending disciplinary boundaries and disrupting traditional binaries between human and nonhuman, the natural and the cultural, the material and the discursive.

In Transforming Language and Literacy Education, editors Kelleen Toohey, Suzanne Smythe, Diane Dagenais and Magali Forte bring together accessible, conceptually rich stories from internationally diverse authors to guide new practices, new conversations and new thinking among scholars and educators at the forefront of languages and literacies learning. The book addresses these concepts for diverse groups of learners including young children, youth and adults in formal educational and community-based settings. Challenging and disruptive, this is a unique and important contribution to language and literacy education.

List of figures
ix
List of contributors
xi
Introduction 1(17)
Kelleen Toohey
Suzanne Smythe
Diane Dagenais
Magali Forte
1 Making and Unmaking Literacy Desirings: Pedagogical Matters of Concern from Writers' Studio
18(14)
Tara Gutshall
Rucker
Candace R. Kuby
2 Practising Place-Thought and Engaging in Critical Place Inquiry in a Public Park: Listening, Letting Go, and Unsettling Our Writing Pedagogies
32(22)
Michelle A. Honeyford
Jennifer Watt
3 Becoming Posthuman: Bodies, Affect, and Earth in the School Garden
54(18)
Saskia Van Viegen
4 Lekta and Literacy in Early Childhood Education: Entwinements of Idealism and Materialism
72(19)
Liselott Mariett Olsson
5 Rethinking Causality Through Children's Literacies
91(13)
Jacqueline Barreiro
6 A Rhizomatic Case Analysis of Instructional Coaching as Becoming
104(16)
Brandon Sherman
Mari Haneda
Annela Teemant
7 "This Documentary Actually Makes Welland Look Good": Exploring Posthumanism in a High School Documentary Film Project
120(16)
Amelie Lemieux
Jennifer Rowsell
8 Affect Theory as a Lens on Teacher Thinking in Adult Language Classrooms
136(17)
Monica Waterhouse
9 The Problem and Potential of Representation: Being and Becoming
153(22)
Margaret MacDonald
Cher Hill
Nathalie Sinclair
10 Exploring Affect in Stop Frame Animation
175(19)
Gabriele Budach
Dimitri Efremov
Daniela Loghin
Gohar Sharoyan
Index 194
Kelleen Toohey, Professor Emerita, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC has been teaching and writing about the education of children whose languages have been minoritized in Canada, especially English language learners. Her book, Learning English at school: Identity, socio-material relations and classroom practice (2nd edition) is in press with Multilingual Matters. Her recent work has explored the affordances of digital making for language and literacy learning.



Suzanne Smythe, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education, Simon Fraser University is an adult literacy researcher and educator who works closely with community-based agencies and educators to understand the implications of new technologies for literacies and learning. She is particularly interested in the potential of technologies to inscribe old and new modes of control and exploitation. She is currently exploring the potential of participatory technology design to intervene in such assemblages and to forge new ways to think and do techno-literacies.









Diane Dagenais, Professor, Simon Fraser University, works in French second language and minority language education. Her research has documented the literacy practices of multilingual children in families, communities and schools. Her recent studies examine encounters between multilingual youth and digital tools for video and story production. Her work is published in a range of French and English language education journals.



Magali Forte is a PhD student in the Faculty of Education at Simon Fraser University (Vancouver, BC, CANADA) and a K-12 teacher in Vancouver. She adopts a sociomaterial perspective to examine the ways in which multilingual and multimodal processes of identity construction unfold through entanglements of humans and nonhumans in second language education settings.