Culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a Fe y Alegria school in Bolivia

This study addresses the problem of a lack of culturally responsive literacy instruction in poorand marginalized communities, in developing countries. Relatedly, the study addresses factors that affect the implementation of this instruction, specifically the training of teachers to provide culturall...

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Main Author: Gates, Tracy
Language:en
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/405
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-4052014-03-26T03:34:52Z Culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a Fe y Alegria school in Bolivia Gates, Tracy cuturally responsive literacy instruction This study addresses the problem of a lack of culturally responsive literacy instruction in poorand marginalized communities, in developing countries. Relatedly, the study addresses factors that affect the implementation of this instruction, specifically the training of teachers to provide culturally responsive literacy instruction. This research provides a grounded description of how teachers in a Bolivian Fe y Alegria school use culturally responsive literacy instruction in the classroom and what factors affect their ability to do so. This case study was based on qualitative data collected from participant interviews, classroom and community observations and analysis of school and government documents. This study concludes that in this setting, despite the Fe y Alegria school's philosophy that reflects the aspects of culturally responsive instruction, few instances of this type of pedagogy in practice were observed. The data revealed rich and varied literacy practices within the community context. However, the data also suggested gaps between the home literacy practices and the literacy practices students were exposed to at school. As well, during the course of teacher interviews regarding formal and informal training, the data supports previous findings in other research that teacher training programs in the developing world were theory laden and for the most part impractical. This study contributes to a small but, hopefully, growing base of research on culturally responsive schools, give educators much needed information on how to consider and utilize the communities' cultural contexts when planning and teaching their students and highlight some of the factors, such as teacher training, that hinder or help the implementation of this type of instruction. 2008-02-20T22:10:25Z 2008-02-20T22:10:25Z 2007 2008-02-20T22:10:25Z 2008-05 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/405 en University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic cuturally responsive
literacy instruction
spellingShingle cuturally responsive
literacy instruction
Gates, Tracy
Culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a Fe y Alegria school in Bolivia
description This study addresses the problem of a lack of culturally responsive literacy instruction in poorand marginalized communities, in developing countries. Relatedly, the study addresses factors that affect the implementation of this instruction, specifically the training of teachers to provide culturally responsive literacy instruction. This research provides a grounded description of how teachers in a Bolivian Fe y Alegria school use culturally responsive literacy instruction in the classroom and what factors affect their ability to do so. This case study was based on qualitative data collected from participant interviews, classroom and community observations and analysis of school and government documents. This study concludes that in this setting, despite the Fe y Alegria school's philosophy that reflects the aspects of culturally responsive instruction, few instances of this type of pedagogy in practice were observed. The data revealed rich and varied literacy practices within the community context. However, the data also suggested gaps between the home literacy practices and the literacy practices students were exposed to at school. As well, during the course of teacher interviews regarding formal and informal training, the data supports previous findings in other research that teacher training programs in the developing world were theory laden and for the most part impractical. This study contributes to a small but, hopefully, growing base of research on culturally responsive schools, give educators much needed information on how to consider and utilize the communities' cultural contexts when planning and teaching their students and highlight some of the factors, such as teacher training, that hinder or help the implementation of this type of instruction.
author Gates, Tracy
author_facet Gates, Tracy
author_sort Gates, Tracy
title Culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a Fe y Alegria school in Bolivia
title_short Culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a Fe y Alegria school in Bolivia
title_full Culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a Fe y Alegria school in Bolivia
title_fullStr Culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a Fe y Alegria school in Bolivia
title_full_unstemmed Culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a Fe y Alegria school in Bolivia
title_sort culturally responsive literacy instruction: a case study of a fe y alegria school in bolivia
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/405
work_keys_str_mv AT gatestracy culturallyresponsiveliteracyinstructionacasestudyofafeyalegriaschoolinbolivia
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