Building Bridges Instead of Walls: Engaging Young Children in Critical Literacy Read Alouds

Situated in the months after the 2016 United States presidential election, this qualitative case study illuminates third-grade children’s sense-making about the GOP Administration’s proposed border wall with Mexico. In light of these present-day politics, close analysis of how young children discus...

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Main Authors: Cassie J Brownell, Anam Rashid
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OpenED Network 2020-05-01
Series:Journal of Curriculum Studies Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/35
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spelling doaj-5df0f1f7502e40d4af94c68601dc6f9f2021-09-07T07:50:23ZengOpenED NetworkJournal of Curriculum Studies Research2690-27882020-05-012110.46303/jcsr.02.01.5Building Bridges Instead of Walls: Engaging Young Children in Critical Literacy Read AloudsCassie J Brownell0Anam Rashid1Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of TorontoUniversity of Toronto Situated in the months after the 2016 United States presidential election, this qualitative case study illuminates third-grade children’s sense-making about the GOP Administration’s proposed border wall with Mexico. In light of these present-day politics, close analysis of how young children discuss social issues remains critical, particularly for social studies educators. Looking across fifteen book discussions, we zero in on three whole-class conversations about (im)migration beginning with initial read alouds through the final debrief wherein children conversed with a local university anthropologist about the clandestine migration of individuals across the U.S.’s southern border. During initial discussions, children in the Midwestern school demonstrated their frustration towards racist laws of the mid-1900s. Others responded with empathy or made personal connections to their own family heritage. In the findings, we note a clear progression in how children understood (im)migration issues as evidenced by how their questions and curiosities shifted in later lessons. We highlight how, when children are encouraged to engage with social topics, they can act as critical consumers and position themselves as politically active and engaged citizens. https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/35social studiescritical literacychildren's literatureearly childhood educationimmigration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cassie J Brownell
Anam Rashid
spellingShingle Cassie J Brownell
Anam Rashid
Building Bridges Instead of Walls: Engaging Young Children in Critical Literacy Read Alouds
Journal of Curriculum Studies Research
social studies
critical literacy
children's literature
early childhood education
immigration
author_facet Cassie J Brownell
Anam Rashid
author_sort Cassie J Brownell
title Building Bridges Instead of Walls: Engaging Young Children in Critical Literacy Read Alouds
title_short Building Bridges Instead of Walls: Engaging Young Children in Critical Literacy Read Alouds
title_full Building Bridges Instead of Walls: Engaging Young Children in Critical Literacy Read Alouds
title_fullStr Building Bridges Instead of Walls: Engaging Young Children in Critical Literacy Read Alouds
title_full_unstemmed Building Bridges Instead of Walls: Engaging Young Children in Critical Literacy Read Alouds
title_sort building bridges instead of walls: engaging young children in critical literacy read alouds
publisher OpenED Network
series Journal of Curriculum Studies Research
issn 2690-2788
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Situated in the months after the 2016 United States presidential election, this qualitative case study illuminates third-grade children’s sense-making about the GOP Administration’s proposed border wall with Mexico. In light of these present-day politics, close analysis of how young children discuss social issues remains critical, particularly for social studies educators. Looking across fifteen book discussions, we zero in on three whole-class conversations about (im)migration beginning with initial read alouds through the final debrief wherein children conversed with a local university anthropologist about the clandestine migration of individuals across the U.S.’s southern border. During initial discussions, children in the Midwestern school demonstrated their frustration towards racist laws of the mid-1900s. Others responded with empathy or made personal connections to their own family heritage. In the findings, we note a clear progression in how children understood (im)migration issues as evidenced by how their questions and curiosities shifted in later lessons. We highlight how, when children are encouraged to engage with social topics, they can act as critical consumers and position themselves as politically active and engaged citizens.
topic social studies
critical literacy
children's literature
early childhood education
immigration
url https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/35
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