Opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>Little Beauty</i> by Anthony Browne and the movie <i>King Kong</i>

The article begins with setting the South African educational context for a postgraduate early literacy research project in the foundation phase (ages 4–9). The research examines how philosophy with children (P4C) might be part of a solution to current problems in reading comprehension. The second a...

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Main Authors: Karin Murris, Vursha Ranchod
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2015-07-01
Series:Reading & Writing
Online Access:https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/69
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spelling doaj-f4d13ad430a74e08b4194ad582659abb2020-11-24T21:10:52ZengAOSISReading & Writing2079-82452308-14222015-07-0161e1e1010.4102/rw.v6i1.6944Opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>Little Beauty</i> by Anthony Browne and the movie <i>King Kong</i>Karin Murris0Vursha Ranchod1School of Education, University of Cape Town, Cape TownShree Bharat Sharda Mandir School, JohannesburgThe article begins with setting the South African educational context for a postgraduate early literacy research project in the foundation phase (ages 4–9). The research examines how philosophy with children (P4C) might be part of a solution to current problems in reading comprehension. The second author reports on her P4C action research with her own children as well as her observations of a Grade 2 classroom in a school near Johannesburg. The research shows how the picturebook Little Beauty by Anthony Browne opens up a philosophical space within which children are allowed to draw on their own life experiences and prior knowledge. The project reveals the depth of their thinking when making intra-textual connections between Little Beauty and the movie King Kong. The facilitated philosophical space also makes it possible for the children to make complex philosophical links between the emotion anger, destructive behaviour and the ethico-political dimensions of punishment. Central to this article are the second author’s critical reflections on how her literacy practices as a mother and foundation phase teacher have fundamentally changed as a result of this project. The article concludes with some implications for the teaching of early literacy in South Africa.https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/69
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karin Murris
Vursha Ranchod
spellingShingle Karin Murris
Vursha Ranchod
Opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>Little Beauty</i> by Anthony Browne and the movie <i>King Kong</i>
Reading & Writing
author_facet Karin Murris
Vursha Ranchod
author_sort Karin Murris
title Opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>Little Beauty</i> by Anthony Browne and the movie <i>King Kong</i>
title_short Opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>Little Beauty</i> by Anthony Browne and the movie <i>King Kong</i>
title_full Opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>Little Beauty</i> by Anthony Browne and the movie <i>King Kong</i>
title_fullStr Opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>Little Beauty</i> by Anthony Browne and the movie <i>King Kong</i>
title_full_unstemmed Opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>Little Beauty</i> by Anthony Browne and the movie <i>King Kong</i>
title_sort opening up a philosophical space in early literacy with <i>little beauty</i> by anthony browne and the movie <i>king kong</i>
publisher AOSIS
series Reading & Writing
issn 2079-8245
2308-1422
publishDate 2015-07-01
description The article begins with setting the South African educational context for a postgraduate early literacy research project in the foundation phase (ages 4–9). The research examines how philosophy with children (P4C) might be part of a solution to current problems in reading comprehension. The second author reports on her P4C action research with her own children as well as her observations of a Grade 2 classroom in a school near Johannesburg. The research shows how the picturebook Little Beauty by Anthony Browne opens up a philosophical space within which children are allowed to draw on their own life experiences and prior knowledge. The project reveals the depth of their thinking when making intra-textual connections between Little Beauty and the movie King Kong. The facilitated philosophical space also makes it possible for the children to make complex philosophical links between the emotion anger, destructive behaviour and the ethico-political dimensions of punishment. Central to this article are the second author’s critical reflections on how her literacy practices as a mother and foundation phase teacher have fundamentally changed as a result of this project. The article concludes with some implications for the teaching of early literacy in South Africa.
url https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/69
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