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- Volume 58, Issue 1, 2023
Research in the Teaching of English - Volume 58, Issue 1, 2023
Volume 58, Issue 1, 2023
- Articles
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A Brave New World Requires Courage: New Directions for Literacy Research and Teaching
Author(s): Deborah ApplemanI offer a meditation on current challenges faced by literacy educators and researchers and uses those challenges to suggest new directions for the field. Citing the precipitous decline in interest in the humanities and the field of literacy education, I consider the significance of tools such as ChatGPT for the teaching of writing. I explore the significance of out-of-school literacies and the linguistic diversity of today’s students in terms of their implications for literacy instruction. I also remind us of the chilling political climate in which we find ourselves, especially with regard to LGBTQ+ identities. Given these contemporary challenges, I suggest that we in the field of literacy education rethink the nature of writing instruction, restructure our research paradigm to be more inclusive and democratic, and continue to be forceful political advocates for pedagogies, practices, and policies that will ensure a just and equitable literacy education for all.
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But These Are Our Stories! Critical Conversations about Bans on Diverse Literature
Author(s): Ruth McKoy LoweryThe field of children’s literature has been adversely affected by the current alarming resurgence of book banning across the United States. Book banning has become the grandstanding stage for individuals on different political platforms to institute their desire to silence issues and people; most of these banned books share experiences that differ from mainstream white society. In their zest to muzzle others and create a dogmatic uniformity to a majority white mainstream, some parents and their political allies have targeted books they deem inappropriate, books that celebrate the kaleidoscope of races, cultures, and mores that make up the US. This essay examines the current wave of banning children’s books and the reasoning behind this trend. I argue that this trend of reader suppression seeks to silence minoritized voices and prevent critical conversations. Finally, I make a call to action for educators to share diverse stories so young readers, especially Black and Brown children, can see representations of themselves in books and other media.
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Opening Up Research on the Teaching of Reading by Looking beyond US Borders: What We Might Learn from Early Literacy Instruction in China
Author(s): Danling Fu and Xiaodi ZhouThis article discusses early literacy instruction in China, including the impact of biliteracy education on Chinese society. This presentation is based on interviews with over two dozen scholars of Chinese literacy instruction, as well as primary early grades language arts classroom teachers from four different regions across China. The purpose of this examination of literacy education in China is to open our views of literacy instruction beyond US borders, especially in those countries with different language/literacy systems. Because of the rapid increase of emergent bilingual students in our schools, we need to gain a better understanding of literacy and biliteracy education in the countries where those students grew up. On the one hand, this insight can help us realize the literacy practices that emergent bilingual students may bring to their learning in our classrooms and the importance of biliteracy as a requisite for our education. On the other hand, this understanding will urge us, both researchers and educators, to reexamine our beliefs and scholarship in reading or literacy education, and open our vision to the plurality of languages, multiple literacies, and diverse methods of literacy instruction beyond our land.
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Literacy Research and Its Relationship with Policy: What and Who Informs Policy and Why Is Some Research Ignored?
Author(s): Uta PapenSocio-cultural and practice-based approaches to literacy, associated with the (New) Literacy Studies, having emerged in the 1980s, nowadays are an established research field. Based on in-depth research, in many contexts and countries, the (New) Literacy Studies has much to offer to teachers and policymakers. And yet this impressive body of work has had little impact on policy. Taking as my example England, I ask what research has shaped policy in the past 30 years and why socio-cultural and practice-based studies have been ignored. Thus, I address the question of where the field has been and where it should go to from the point of view of its relationship with policy. My focus is on the initial teaching of literacy in primary (elementary) schools. I discuss three factors which I believe contribute to our struggles to influence policy: the policy environment itself and how it has changed; the wider economy of literacy research and what knowledge counts in the interface between research and policy; and, finally, the role of the media and public discourse in the relationship between research and policy. I end with questions about what we may have missed and where the field might want to go.
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Curriculum-as-Assemblage: Transgressive (Re)Imaginings in English and Literacies
Author(s): Limarys CaraballoIn the midst of multiple ongoing local and global crises, and persistently polarizing discourses about what should and should not be taught in classrooms and schools, we can draw inspiration and hope from thinking across boundaries to reimagine curriculum in English and literacies education. While curriculum has historically contributed to the gatekeeping and sorting of youth as well as perpetuating the status quo, it has also been transformative, expanding possibilities in how we think and express ourselves. In this essay, I examine how English language arts curricula have been and are currently defined, invoked, or imagined, highlighting how innovative research and practice across multiple sociopolitical and disciplinary boundaries can transform how curriculum is enacted and experienced. Drawing from assemblage theories, I present a curriculum-as-assemblage stance that renders visible the interrelatedness of such social, political, and socioeconomic discourses with the knowledges, identities, and literacies that are constructed and negotiated in the broader context of schooling. To illustrate what such a conceptualization can offer, I describe a practice approach to thinking about curriculum as it is enacted, experienced, and rhizomatically connected to the multiple identities and narratives of students and teachers. I argue that an interdisciplinary and transgressive stance toward English and literacies education can foster creative, inclusive, expansive, humanizing, justice-oriented, and joyful thinking forward about our field.
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Literacy Research, Systems Thinking, and Climate Change
Author(s): Richard BeachThis article posits the need for literacy research on teachers’ and students’ use of systems thinking for studying climate change. Drawing on sociocultural activity theory of learning, it perceives the need for engaging in systems thinking given the negative impacts of energy, transportation and community design, agriculture and food production, and economics and politics systems themselves on ecosystems—for example, the negative effects of fossil fuel energy systems on emissions production. Researchers could analyze teachers’ and/or students’ use of the following components derived from activity theory for analyzing these systems: objects and outcomes, roles, tools, rules and norms, and beliefs and discourses. For example, teachers and students may employ language for naming phenomena about climate change, responding to literature, engaging in media production, or using emissions mapping tools to critique status-quo systems and use those tools to portray ways of transforming those systems. They may also engage in critical inquiry of rules and norms or beliefs and discourses derived from capitalist economic systems that promote excessive consumption with detrimental environmental impacts and attempts in the political system to resist instruction on climate change.
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Volumes & issues
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Volume 58 (2023 - 2024)
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Volume 57 (2022 - 2023)
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Volume 56 (2021 - 2022)
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Volume 55 (2020 - 2021)
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Volume 54 (2019 - 2020)
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Volume 53 (2018 - 2019)
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Volume 52 (2017)
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Volume 51 (2016 - 2017)
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Volume 50 (2015 - 2017)
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Volume 49 (2014 - 2015)
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Volume 48 (2013 - 2014)
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Volume 47 (2012 - 2013)
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Volume 46 (2011 - 2012)
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Volume 45 (2010 - 2011)
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Volume 44 (2009 - 2010)
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Volume 43 (2008 - 2009)
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Volume 42 (2007 - 2008)
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Volume 41 (2006 - 2007)
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Volume 40 (2005 - 2006)
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Volume 39 (2004 - 2005)
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Volume 38 (2003 - 2004)
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Volume 37 (2002 - 2003)
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Volume 36 (2001 - 2002)
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Volume 35 (2000 - 2001)
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Volume 34 (1999 - 2000)
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Volume 33 (1998 - 1999)
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Volume 32 (1998)
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Volume 31 (1997)
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Volume 30 (1996)
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Volume 29 (1995)
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Volume 28 (1994)
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Volume 27 (1993)
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Volume 26 (1992)
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Volume 25 (1991)
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Volume 24 (1990)
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Volume 23 (1989)
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Volume 22 (1988)
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Volume 21 (1987)
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Volume 20 (1986)
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Volume 19 (1985)
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Volume 18 (1984)
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Volume 17 (1983)
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Volume 16 (1982)
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Volume 15 (1981)
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Volume 14 (1980)
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Volume 13 (1979)
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Volume 12 (1978)
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Volume 11 (1977)
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Volume 10 (1976)
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Volume 9 (1975)
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Volume 8 (1974)
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Volume 7 (1973)
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Volume 6 (1972)
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Volume 5 (1971)
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Volume 4 (1970)
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Volume 3 (1969)
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Volume 2 (1968)
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Volume 1 (1967)