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Literacy education: for work and at work Peter Freebody School of Education, The University of Queensland Adelaide, 5 August 2005
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The changing environment All employment sectors (professional, manufacturing, construction, trades, etc) with flat or dropping employment share across the 1980s and 90s except Service sector growth (35% in 1978 – 44% in 1992) and continuing
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Growth rates in employment share, 1990-2000 Professional/manag’t: 45% Semi-professional: 25% Tradespersons: 0% Clerical, sales (incl. casual): 30% Labouring/unskilled: 4%
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Pathways? More and more long-term movement: in and out of education and training in and out of different jobs in and out of casual-stable work
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The setting: Forms of learning and reading, and ‘forms of life’: A challenge from Jean Anyon’s (1997) ethnographic study of city schools in New Jersey
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Learning and work Four ways of relating the work activities presented to students, the ethos of the classroom, and the opportunity structures they co- present
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The first … “preparation for mechanical labour” carefully sequenced movement from simple to more difficult tasks / tests test- rather than rationale-driven no explicit connectedness a culture of learning for ‘correctness- and-control’
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The second … “preparation for low/middle-level office/bureau work” learning to be ‘selective and appropriate’ little creativity or critical judgement a culture of ‘learning for access to and appropriate use of information
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The third … “preparation for intellectual, scientific, artistic work” discerning, critical thinking acquiring cultural and symbolic capital an ethos of expressiveness, self- evaluation and analysis
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And fourth … “preparation for leadership, ownership and control” debate, the appreciation and mobilisation of multiple perspectives knowledge of and practice in manipulating the socially valued tools of system analysis and knowledge making
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What if.. ‘good students’ from each of these classrooms scored equally well on standard ‘reading tests’? Would they be ‘equally good readers’?
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Future, multi-literacies Literacy refers to “the flexible and sustainable mastery of a repertoire of practices with the texts of traditional and new communications technologies via spoken language, print and multi- media.” (Luke, Freebody & Land, 2000)
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Teaching literacy Shared perspective, vocabulary in the school? Shared theories of curricular scope and sequence? Four resources for literacy develop and inform one another as the school years progress
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The jobs a pedagogy has to do Manage the bodies and props; Manage the attention of students; ‘Deliver’ the syllabus; Allow for self-expression; Protect all individuals; Relate to individual differences; Monitor students’ progress; and ….
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Changing teacher practice? An e.g. Edwards-Groves (2003) Having teachers focus on the “participation structure” What changes would enhance you lessons as “settings for thought”?
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What the teachers found… and changed Pre- and post- framing: ‘Why this?’ ‘Why this now?’ and ‘What’s the goal?’ – “letting them in on the secret” Regulatory talk cutting across the pedagogical line Too much ‘what next?’ for thinking Limited range of literacy resources
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The significance of the critical The down side of New Times: the inadequacy of common sense as a critical resource The cautionary tale of Guttenberg and Ramus: taming the technology Preparing our students to structure their opportunities in the Misinformation Age?
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References Anyon, J. (1997) Ghetto schooling: A political economy of urban educational reform. New York: Teachers College Press. Edwards-Groves, C.J. (2002) Building an inclusive classroom through explicit pedagogy: A focus on the language of teaching. Sydney: Prentice Hall. Luke, A., Freebody, P. & Land, R. (2000) Literate futures: Review of literacy education. Brisbane, Queensland: Education Queensland.
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