Real Talk: A Teacher Researches Language, Literacy and Diversity in an Urban High School Classroom
Thesis advisor: Curt Dudley-Marling === This project was my attempt to rewrite the discourse of schooling within the context of my own classroom to transform it into a dialogic, multilingual, multi-literacy and critical literacy site that offered students opportunities for rigorous and relevant inte...
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ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1016592019-05-10T07:34:36Z Real Talk: A Teacher Researches Language, Literacy and Diversity in an Urban High School Classroom Hennessy, Robin Marie Thesis advisor: Curt Dudley-Marling Text thesis 2011 Boston College English electronic application/pdf This project was my attempt to rewrite the discourse of schooling within the context of my own classroom to transform it into a dialogic, multilingual, multi-literacy and critical literacy site that offered students opportunities for rigorous and relevant intellectual work. The purpose of this study was to deepen my understanding of the teaching and learning of language and literacies in diverse urban schools so that I might enhance my practice and contribute to the knowledge-base in the field. To that end, I asked: what happens when I broaden what counts as academic discourse and academic texts? Engaging in practitioner inquiry, I studied the discursive space of my ninth grade literacy class in the urban public school where I teach. Throughout the 2008-09 academic year, I collected data in the form of audio-recordings of class discussions and student interviews, student work and a teacher journal. Using critical discourse analysis, I analyzed the discursive space and situated those findings across local, institutional and societal domains. My analysis of the data suggests that urban schools need not rely on scripted and low-expectations curricula that limit ways with words in academic contexts. Instead, I argue that a student-centered and dialogic pedagogy, which centers students not only in classroom discourse, but also in the curriculum by including texts and instructional practices relevant to their lives beyond the school walls, creates a context for student engagement in rigorous intellectual work. To that end, teachers need not devalue particular literacies or ways with words as inappropriate for classroom discourse, but should instead draw on students' funds of knowledge as legitimate resources for learning. Adolescent Literacy Critical Discourse Analysis Diversity Language Teacher Research Urban Education Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2011. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Curriculum and Instruction. 281087 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2166 |
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Adolescent Literacy Critical Discourse Analysis Diversity Language Teacher Research Urban Education |
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Adolescent Literacy Critical Discourse Analysis Diversity Language Teacher Research Urban Education Hennessy, Robin Marie Real Talk: A Teacher Researches Language, Literacy and Diversity in an Urban High School Classroom |
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Thesis advisor: Curt Dudley-Marling === This project was my attempt to rewrite the discourse of schooling within the context of my own classroom to transform it into a dialogic, multilingual, multi-literacy and critical literacy site that offered students opportunities for rigorous and relevant intellectual work. The purpose of this study was to deepen my understanding of the teaching and learning of language and literacies in diverse urban schools so that I might enhance my practice and contribute to the knowledge-base in the field. To that end, I asked: what happens when I broaden what counts as academic discourse and academic texts? Engaging in practitioner inquiry, I studied the discursive space of my ninth grade literacy class in the urban public school where I teach. Throughout the 2008-09 academic year, I collected data in the form of audio-recordings of class discussions and student interviews, student work and a teacher journal. Using critical discourse analysis, I analyzed the discursive space and situated those findings across local, institutional and societal domains. My analysis of the data suggests that urban schools need not rely on scripted and low-expectations curricula that limit ways with words in academic contexts. Instead, I argue that a student-centered and dialogic pedagogy, which centers students not only in classroom discourse, but also in the curriculum by including texts and instructional practices relevant to their lives beyond the school walls, creates a context for student engagement in rigorous intellectual work. To that end, teachers need not devalue particular literacies or ways with words as inappropriate for classroom discourse, but should instead draw on students' funds of knowledge as legitimate resources for learning. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2011. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Curriculum and Instruction. |
author |
Hennessy, Robin Marie |
author_facet |
Hennessy, Robin Marie |
author_sort |
Hennessy, Robin Marie |
title |
Real Talk: A Teacher Researches Language, Literacy and Diversity in an Urban High School Classroom |
title_short |
Real Talk: A Teacher Researches Language, Literacy and Diversity in an Urban High School Classroom |
title_full |
Real Talk: A Teacher Researches Language, Literacy and Diversity in an Urban High School Classroom |
title_fullStr |
Real Talk: A Teacher Researches Language, Literacy and Diversity in an Urban High School Classroom |
title_full_unstemmed |
Real Talk: A Teacher Researches Language, Literacy and Diversity in an Urban High School Classroom |
title_sort |
real talk: a teacher researches language, literacy and diversity in an urban high school classroom |
publisher |
Boston College |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2166 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT hennessyrobinmarie realtalkateacherresearcheslanguageliteracyanddiversityinanurbanhighschoolclassroom |
_version_ |
1719078740974108672 |