Article

Reading, Writing, Resonating: striking chords across the contexts of students’ everyday and college lives

Details

Citation

Mannion G, Miller K, Gibb I & Goodman R (2009) Reading, Writing, Resonating: striking chords across the contexts of students’ everyday and college lives. Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 17 (3), pp. 323-339. https://doi.org/10.1080/14681360903194343

Abstract
This paper draws on data from an ESRC funded research project on literacies in the context of further education in the UK. Taking a social view of reading and writing moves us away from seeing literacy (singular) as a universal set of transferable skills towards seeing literacies (plural) as emergent practices found in social settings. Taking a situated, socio-cultural approach also leads us to notice how contexts and practice co-emerge. The research project we document sought to inquire into the interface between literacies in students’ everyday lives and their formal college coursework. Findings indicate that if contexts and their associated literacies are co-emergent and co-determined by each other, then literacy skills do not simply ‘transfer’ between contexts but are better seen as resonant across contexts through the manner in which discrete aspects of literacy practices relate. We conclude by delineating some strategies for enacting a critical, situated-yet-polycontextual literacy pedagogy that pays respect to students’ everyday literacies as a valuable resource base in formal coursework.

Keywords
new literacy studies; literacies; literacy; further education; higher education; pedagogy; critical literacy; context; situated learning; polycontextual learning; literacy practice; transfer; Literacy; Learning; Further education Great Britain; Literacy Great Britain; Learning, Psychology of

Journal
Pedagogy, Culture and Society: Volume 17, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/10/2009
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/897
PublisherTaylor & Francis
ISSN1468-1366
eISSN1747-5104

People (1)

Professor Gregory Mannion

Professor Gregory Mannion

Professor, Education

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