Furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early years

Embracing qualitative methods in an approach situated at the interface between education, social science and philosophy, the author offers a phenomenologically-oriented account of early family literacy, as experienced by a five year-old girl in Alsace, France. The paper seeks to enliven a fresh look...

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Main Author: joan barbara travers simon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Language and Literacy Researchers of Canada 2012-11-01
Series:Language and Literacy: A Canadian Educational e-journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/langandlit/index.php/langandlit/article/view/11680
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spelling doaj-795ebe0bf2974c15b02f0d1e5a24f8cf2020-11-25T03:15:36ZengLanguage and Literacy Researchers of CanadaLanguage and Literacy: A Canadian Educational e-journal1496-09742012-11-0114312610.20360/G2NC7T11680Furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early yearsjoan barbara travers simon0university of LuxembourgEmbracing qualitative methods in an approach situated at the interface between education, social science and philosophy, the author offers a phenomenologically-oriented account of early family literacy, as experienced by a five year-old girl in Alsace, France. The paper seeks to enliven a fresh look at what we believe we see/understand and how we choose to disseminate this, thus it interrogates orthodoxies with regard to academic discourses and research methodology. The author proposes that to learn is to be in media res in the interminable flux of possibility. It is a never-ending story, which can only be told at a particular cross-section of time and place. Much follows from this insight, foremost among which is to accept that to attempt to understand and learn from learning, and to write academic ‘readings’ of learning, entails abandoning measurables and product-driven orientations in favour of processual ones.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/langandlit/index.php/langandlit/article/view/11680literacymethodologylearningchildrenhomefamily
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author joan barbara travers simon
spellingShingle joan barbara travers simon
Furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early years
Language and Literacy: A Canadian Educational e-journal
literacy
methodology
learning
children
home
family
author_facet joan barbara travers simon
author_sort joan barbara travers simon
title Furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early years
title_short Furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early years
title_full Furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early years
title_fullStr Furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early years
title_full_unstemmed Furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early years
title_sort furrows in the field, or down in the jungle: re-membering domestic literacy in the early years
publisher Language and Literacy Researchers of Canada
series Language and Literacy: A Canadian Educational e-journal
issn 1496-0974
publishDate 2012-11-01
description Embracing qualitative methods in an approach situated at the interface between education, social science and philosophy, the author offers a phenomenologically-oriented account of early family literacy, as experienced by a five year-old girl in Alsace, France. The paper seeks to enliven a fresh look at what we believe we see/understand and how we choose to disseminate this, thus it interrogates orthodoxies with regard to academic discourses and research methodology. The author proposes that to learn is to be in media res in the interminable flux of possibility. It is a never-ending story, which can only be told at a particular cross-section of time and place. Much follows from this insight, foremost among which is to accept that to attempt to understand and learn from learning, and to write academic ‘readings’ of learning, entails abandoning measurables and product-driven orientations in favour of processual ones.
topic literacy
methodology
learning
children
home
family
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/langandlit/index.php/langandlit/article/view/11680
work_keys_str_mv AT joanbarbaratraverssimon furrowsinthefieldordowninthejunglerememberingdomesticliteracyintheearlyyears
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