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Main Authors: Heron-Hruby, Alison, Hagood, Margaret C., Alvermann, Donna E.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ799578
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author Heron-Hruby, Alison
Hagood, Margaret C.
Alvermann, Donna E.
author_facet Heron-Hruby, Alison
Hagood, Margaret C.
Alvermann, Donna E.
Heron-Hruby, Alison
Hagood, Margaret C.
Alvermann, Donna E.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Switching Places and Looking to Adolescents for the Practices that Shape School Literacies Heron-Hruby, Alison Hagood, Margaret C. Alvermann, Donna E. Popular Culture Reading Achievement Conflict Adolescents Adolescent Literature English Teachers Librarians Social Influences Cultural Influences Political Influences Conflict Resolution Middle School Students High School Students This study investigated how three adolescents who struggled to meet school-based standards for reading achievement used popular culture texts both in and out of school. Specifically, we focused on how the adolescents' uses of popular culture shaped and were shaped by adult expectations for literate practice. The adults in our study included two English/language arts teachers, the librarian in the Young Adult Section of a local public library, and the three authors of this article, who acted as the facilitators for an after-school media club. Using resistance theory, we analyzed the conflicts that arose when the adolescents' uses of popular culture differed from the adults', our objective being to locate opportunities for productive inquiry and shared meaning. Our findings suggest that adult-youth conflict over popular culture can provide young people with opportunities to investigate sociocultural and sociopolitical issues. Such conflict can also provide adults who work with adolescents opportunities to reflect on how their own expectations about reading and writing shape student learning.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ799578
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle Switching Places and Looking to Adolescents for the Practices that Shape School Literacies
Heron-Hruby, Alison
Hagood, Margaret C.
Alvermann, Donna E.
Popular Culture
Reading Achievement
Conflict
Adolescents
Adolescent Literature
English Teachers
Librarians
Social Influences
Cultural Influences
Political Influences
Conflict Resolution
Middle School Students
High School Students
Switching Places and Looking to Adolescents for the Practices that Shape School Literacies Heron-Hruby, Alison Hagood, Margaret C. Alvermann, Donna E. Popular Culture Reading Achievement Conflict Adolescents Adolescent Literature English Teachers Librarians Social Influences Cultural Influences Political Influences Conflict Resolution Middle School Students High School Students This study investigated how three adolescents who struggled to meet school-based standards for reading achievement used popular culture texts both in and out of school. Specifically, we focused on how the adolescents' uses of popular culture shaped and were shaped by adult expectations for literate practice. The adults in our study included two English/language arts teachers, the librarian in the Young Adult Section of a local public library, and the three authors of this article, who acted as the facilitators for an after-school media club. Using resistance theory, we analyzed the conflicts that arose when the adolescents' uses of popular culture differed from the adults', our objective being to locate opportunities for productive inquiry and shared meaning. Our findings suggest that adult-youth conflict over popular culture can provide young people with opportunities to investigate sociocultural and sociopolitical issues. Such conflict can also provide adults who work with adolescents opportunities to reflect on how their own expectations about reading and writing shape student learning.
title Switching Places and Looking to Adolescents for the Practices that Shape School Literacies
topic Popular Culture
Reading Achievement
Conflict
Adolescents
Adolescent Literature
English Teachers
Librarians
Social Influences
Cultural Influences
Political Influences
Conflict Resolution
Middle School Students
High School Students
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ799578