Crossing boundaries: Literacy practices in formal and informal contexts in FE and HE Mary Hamilton,...
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Transcript of Crossing boundaries: Literacy practices in formal and informal contexts in FE and HE Mary Hamilton,...
Crossing boundaries: Literacy practices in formal and informal contexts in FE and HE
Mary Hamilton, David Barton and Candice Satchwell
Literacy Research Centre, Lancaster University
LiDU Seminar, Glasgow, 1 March, 2010www.literacy.lancs.ac.uk
Data from two different projects
• Literacies for Learning in Further Education (LfLFE) project ESRC 2004—7
• Academics Writing a pilot study of how the writing practices of academic staff are changing
Contributions of a Literacy Studies approach
Literacies are part of social practices which are observable in literacy “events” or “moments” and are patterned by social institutions and power relationships. This approach encourages us to look beyond texts themselves to what people do with literacy, with whom, where and how
Aspects of a literacy practice
AUDIENCE(S)
TEXT-TYPE(S)
CONTENT
MEDIUM
MODE(S)
ARTEFACTS
PURPOSE
PARTICIPANTS
FEELINGS
ACTIVITY/PROCESS
PLACE/SPACE
TIME/DURATION
VALUESassociated with the practice
IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
Aspects of a literacy practice
AUDIENCE(S)
TEXT-TYPE(S)
CONTENT
MEDIUM
MODE(S)
ARTEFACTS
PURPOSE
PARTICIPANTS
FEELINGS
ACTIVITY/PROCESS
PLACE/SPACE
TIME/DURATION
VALUESassociated with the practice
IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
Aspects of a literacy practice
AUDIENCE(S)
TEXT-TYPE(S)
CONTENT
MEDIUM
MODE(S)
ARTEFACTS
PURPOSE
PARTICIPANTS
FEELINGS
ACTIVITY/PROCESS
PLACE/SPACE
TIME/DURATION
VALUESassociated with the practice
IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
. ‘I was interested in questions raised about
who is represented in a course population which is able and happy to take on the uncertainty and chaos of digital culture as a topic of study - how lessons from this kind of brave and exciting experiment in pedagogy might be applicable to the more personally threatened learners often found in widening participation contexts.’
Borders and boundaries in Literacies for Learning in FE project
• Notion of ‘border literacies’ was abandoned; instead:
• Literacy practices in different domains of students’ lives had different characteristics
• Literacy practices can be separated out into different aspects or elements
• Could we identify elements of literacy practices which can travel across boundaries?
• Does this vary for different people in different situations?
Aspects of a literacy practice
AUDIENCE(S)
TEXT-TYPE(S)
CONTENT
MEDIUM
MODE(S)
ARTEFACTS
PURPOSE
PARTICIPANTS
FEELINGS
ACTIVITY/PROCESS
PLACE/SPACE
TIME/DURATION
VALUESassociated with the practice
IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
AspecAspecSelf/Family AUDIENCE(S)
Web-pages TEXT-TYPE(S)
Of personal interest CONTENT
Multimedia MEDIUM
Multimodal MODE(S)
Computer ARTEFACTS
Specific – to buy most appropriate dog PURPOSE
Self/Family PARTICIPANTS
Engaged FEELINGS
Web search ACTIVITY/PROCESS
Home PLACE/SPACE
Self-determined TIME/DURATION
Responsibility to family VALUESassociated with the practice
Computer-literate family member IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
Researching dog breeds on the internet
AspecAspec Tutor/Examining body AUDIENCE(S)
Web-pages TEXT-TYPE(S)
Course-related CONTENT
Multimedia MEDIUM
Multimodal MODE(S)
Computer ARTEFACTS
Ambiguous - to achieve qualification PURPOSE
Self PARTICIPANTS
Disengaged ? FEELINGS
Web search ACTIVITY/PROCESS
College PLACE/SPACE
Determined by tutor TIME/DURATION
Unclear ? VALUESassociated with the practice
Student – low-achieving ? IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
Searching for childcare locations on the internet for college assignment
Characteristics of FE students’ ‘preferred’ literacy practices
• Mostly multi-modal, e.g. involving speech, music, gesture, movement, colour, pictures, symbols
• Mostly multi-media, e.g. including sound, electronic and paper media
• Shared, interactive, participatory – virtual and/or real• Non-linear, i.e. involving complex, varied reading paths• Agentic, i.e. with the student being in charge• Purposeful to the student• Clear audience perceived by the student• Generative, i.e. involving sense-making and creativity• Self-determined in terms of activity, time and place
Characteristics of students’ literacy practices mapped onto aspects of a
literacy practice
Clear AUDIENCE(S) Ambiguous
Non-Linear TEXT-TYPE(S) Linear
Generative CONTENT Non-generative
Multimedia MEDIUM Mostly paper
Multimodal MODE(S) Monomodal
Personal ARTEFACTS Impersonal
Clear PURPOSE Ambiguous
More than one PARTICIPANTS One
Engaged FEELINGS Disengaged
Agentic ACTIVITY/PROCESS Imposed
Not designated PLACE/SPACE Designated
Self-determined TIME/DURATION Specified
Shared VALUES Not shared
Identified with IDENTITIES Not identified with
AspecAspecAUDIENCE(S)
TEXT-TYPE(S)
CONTENT
MEDIUM
MODE(S)
ARTEFACTS
PURPOSE
PARTICIPANTS
FEELINGS
ACTIVITY/PROCESS
PLACE/SPACE
TIME/DURATION
VALUESassociated with the practice
IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
Extent of resonance with students’ Extent of resonance with students’ preferred literacies preferred literacies
Demonstrating understanding of food hygiene
AspecAspecAUDIENCE(S)
TEXT-TYPE(S)
CONTENT
MEDIUM
MODE(S)
ARTEFACTS
PURPOSE
PARTICIPANTS
FEELINGS
ACTIVITY/PROCESS
PLACE/SPACE
TIME/DURATION
VALUESassociated with the practice
IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
Extent of resonance with students’ Extent of resonance with students’ preferred literacies preferred literacies
Demonstrating understanding of food hygiene
ESSAY
AspecAspecAUDIENCE(S)
TEXT-TYPE(S)
CONTENT
MEDIUM
MODE(S)
ARTEFACTS
PURPOSE
PARTICIPANTS
FEELINGS
ACTIVITY/PROCESS
PLACE/SPACE
TIME/DURATION
VALUESassociated with the practice
IDENTITIESinscribed in the practice
Extent of resonance with students’ Extent of resonance with students’ preferred literaciespreferred literacies
Demonstrating understanding of food hygiene
KITCHEN LAYOUT DIAGRAM
ESSAY
Roles and identities
• Identification with role of ‘student’ – could change as student progressed through college
• Identification with imagined future, or real present, in the workplace
• Identification with these roles could include taking on the values of the literacy practices of their course and/or of the workplace.
• CS: Okay. So anything in particular? Do you … do you want to work as a waiter, or as a chef or …
• SAM: I want to be a chef, definitely • (…)• SAM: But I don’t really know what got me into it. I think it
was … I was a bit of a KP, like a pot washer, kitchen porter for a bit like at school, and I always wanted to be the chef there. I always looked up to the chef type of thing, because you know, so …
• CS: And could you have just carried on without coming to college if you wanted?SAM: I could have, yeah. You could do anything without going to college, you can really, but it’s not advised.
• CS: So what made you think that you should come?• SAM: To college? Because I wanted the qualifications. I
wanted it written down that I was qualified to be a chef.
Academics Writing in a Changing World
I sometimes I’m tempted to work at home …. Because then I can smoke…. But I generally resist that. I like to be work work, and home home, you know. So I come in every day and I don’t stay at home,. There might be a very occasional kind of panic, you know, when I’ve got some deadline to meet or something like that. I will actually stick it on my data stick and take it home and do some work at night, but mostly it’s, I do it here and if need be even I come in here on a Saturday.
I now try not to check the e-mail until 2 o’clock and so on. I find that very difficult to do but I think that it’s absolutely essential, certainly if I’m to get my work done… this lifetime, then that kind of focusing and organisation is absolutely essential. Keeping this place at bay, keeping the students at bay, I’m very committed to my students and my teaching, I take that stuff very seriously, but you know, if you aren’t single minded and have a clear kind of form of organisation that gives you the space, it’s really very difficult.
….I don’t take hand written notes any more, I underline stuff in books and I tend to write a key to my annotations in the front flyleaf and the page number and what particular thing I’ve annotated, then I underline stuff in the margins but my handwriting isn’t reliable and if I leave it, after a couple of weeks I can’t read what I’ve written…. if I can’t remember what I’ve written, I generally can’t read it and so I’ve always typed for years.
I have a laptop a rather rickety old IBM …..but one of the things I am thinking about doing is getting a new laptop …you know I have a separate machine at home that I run the internet on but I keep my laptop as a walled garden, never goes onto the internet, never leaves the house actually, don’t know why I have a laptop frankly but there we go. It just sits there, I transfer stuff on a data stick between my computer and the one downstairs if I’m going to e-mail it to somebody but apart from that I don’t do anything else….
Conclusion.
• “Boundaries” are construed very differently by different people;
• Technologies are acting to dissolve boundaries of time and space in ways that are sometimes welcomed, sometimes resisted by users;
• Practices situated in informal contexts do not migrate in any simple way into educational settings even when technology is in place to facilitate this;
• A literacy studies approach can help untangle the elements of social practice that are in alignment or conflict and so aid understanding of outcomes in specific settings.