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Bài trích
“That Sounds So Cooool” Entanglements of Children, Digital Tools, and Literacy Practices
Toohey, Kelleen.
2015
pages 461-485.
A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect.
English
ISSN: 1545-7249
English language
Ngôn ngữ
Mô tả
Marc
Tác giả CN
Toohey, Kelleen.
Nhan đề
“That Sounds So Cooool”: Entanglements of Children, Digital Tools, and Literacy Practices / Kelleen Toohey, Diane Dagenais, Andreea Fodor, Linda Hof, Omar Nuñez, Angelpreet Singh and Liz Schulze.
Thông tin xuất bản
2015
Mô tả vật lý
pages 461-485.
Tùng thư
A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect.
Tóm tắt
Many observers have argued that minority language speakers often have difficulty with school-based literacy and that the poorer school achievement of such learners occurs at least partly as a result of these difficulties. At the same time, many have argued for a recognition of the multiple literacies required for citizens in a 21st century world. In this study the researchers examined a specific case in which English language learners (ELLs) made short videos about sustainability and social justice, to determine the diverse literacy practices such activities entailed. The researchers found that children produced storyboards and scripts, and videos with titles, and engaged in several other literacy activities, discussing what “made sense” in sequencing in a documentary story, what sustainability and social justice meant, how to report on information they had gathered, and so on. They also examined how new materiality theories might assist us in analyzing how ELLs engage in digital literacy activities. These theories encourage us to think about how human beings interact with other kinds of materials to accomplish perhaps novel tasks. With respect to language learning, such a view might challenge our conceptions of language and literacy learning. For new materiality theorists, language and literacy cannot be an “out-there” kind of “thing” that learners put “inside” themselves. Rather, languages and literacies and people and their activities and other materials accompany one another, and are entangled in sociomaterial assemblages that rub up against one another in complex and as yet unpredictable ways.
Thuật ngữ chủ đề
English language-
Study and teaching-
Periodicals.
Thuật ngữ chủ đề
Ngôn ngữ-
Giảng dạy-
Học tập-
TVĐHHN
Tác giả(bs) CN
Dagenais, Diane.
Tác giả(bs) CN
Fodor, Andreea.
Tác giả(bs) CN
Hof, Linda.
Tác giả(bs) CN
Nuñez, Omar.
Tác giả(bs) CN
Schulze, Liz.
Tác giả(bs) CN
Singh, Angelpreet.
Nguồn trích
TESOL Quarterly- Volume 49, Issue 3, September 2015.
MARC
Hiển thị đầy đủ trường & trường con
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A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect.
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Many observers have argued that minority language speakers often have difficulty with school-based literacy and that the poorer school achievement of such learners occurs at least partly as a result of these difficulties. At the same time, many have argued for a recognition of the multiple literacies required for citizens in a 21st century world. In this study the researchers examined a specific case in which English language learners (ELLs) made short videos about sustainability and social justice, to determine the diverse literacy practices such activities entailed. The researchers found that children produced storyboards and scripts, and videos with titles, and engaged in several other literacy activities, discussing what “made sense” in sequencing in a documentary story, what sustainability and social justice meant, how to report on information they had gathered, and so on. They also examined how new materiality theories might assist us in analyzing how ELLs engage in digital literacy activities. These theories encourage us to think about how human beings interact with other kinds of materials to accomplish perhaps novel tasks. With respect to language learning, such a view might challenge our conceptions of language and literacy learning. For new materiality theorists, language and literacy cannot be an “out-there” kind of “thing” that learners put “inside” themselves. Rather, languages and literacies and people and their activities and other materials accompany one another, and are entangled in sociomaterial assemblages that rub up against one another in complex and as yet unpredictable ways.
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