Speaking of adolescent literacy, Bomer seems
to be influenced by John Dewey’s educational philosophy profoundly, stating
that reading and writing are meaningful when literacy experience is based and drawn
on students’ lives. With this being said, Bomer presented some reading and
writing strategies, including free writing, keeping writer’s notebook,
one-on-one student-teacher conference, and reading-writing workshop, that he
considers useful and meaningful for students. On the other hand, Pirie calls
for reshaping high school English curriculum by adding elements of media and
popular culture to English classes. He advocates the importance of the web of
textuality by stating that “the ‘web’ is the accumulated experience ‘texts’
that students bring to the activity of ‘reading’” (p.22). In this sense, “text”
is referred to products of mass media and popular culture, and “reading”
involves viewing and listening. Both readings provide authors’ thoughtful
insights with respect to adolescent literacy development and experience, which
reminds me of the idea of multiliteracies proposed by New London Group.
The
essence of the idea of multiliteracies lies in that literacy is for
communication, and since we are living in an era in which our ways of
communication are changed by technologies, we need to have multiple literacies
to live and survive. That is, reading goes beyond reading physical texts,
including reading perceived texts as well; writing may involve different modes
of products. As reading and writing expand their scopes, we need more varied
skills and abilities to function within the society. Typing, navigating
websites, and critically analyzing information are examples of being a literate
person in the sense of multiliteracies.
With the idea of
multiliteracies in mind, Bomer’s and Pirie’s reading address different types of
literacies. In Bomer’s text, though he especially focuses on the so-called
traditional ways of reading and writing, and he has his particular approaches
to train students’ ways of thinking and then reading and writing, I think the
training he provides for students is the foundation that enables students to
experience “the web of textuality.” Pirie’s argument, on the other hand, is
closer to the idea of multiliteracies with a particularly emphasis on critical
literacy.
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| Literacy Mushroom (Source: http://allthingslearning.wordpress.com/tag/multiple-literacies/) |
Questions:
What are some strategies in Bomer’s and
Pirie’s texts you find useful and/or practical? What are some other strategies
you would recommend for teaching reading and writing?

You make some great points about kinds of writing that differ from how English teachers usually define writing. Myers' book is a great example of an alternative kind of writing, with Steve writing a movie script. If I were teaching this book in a classroom, I might give students the option of writing their own movie script, using "Monster" as inspiration.
ReplyDeleteComing from the publishing perspective, I was excited to see Bomer have kids create a magazine from their notebooks. I actually made a note while reading chapter 2 (maybe it was chapter 3) that notebooks could be a jumping off point for a classroom-created literary journal that could be printed and given out to other students. We did a similar project in my junior-year English class in which we interviewed veterans and wrote their stories for a book, which was published and sold locally.
Moving online, students could create a blog that weaves in different kinds of texts. From there, we could have the class collaborate on a website highlighting student work. There are tons of possibilities.
Ying-- I love the idea that about having students 'remix' something. I have a friend who taught English 110 at the University of Idaho for the past couple of years. She was pretty focused on helping her students read the world around them (music, tv, etc) critically. One of their final projects was to make a 'remix' or some kind of mash-up type video that represented their generation. (I think this is the assignment). I think this is a good example of how students can demonstrate their critical literacy skills by synthesizing the cultural inputs around them into a coherent 'text' (video). This assignment would work well for high school students, too; especially if they worked in groups.
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