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Published byKelly Davidson Modified over 8 years ago
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Teaching Civic Literacy Projects Teaching the Hudson Valley 2015 Institute Shira Eve Epstein, Ed.D. The City College of New York (CUNY) sepstein@ccny.cuny.edu
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Inspiration and Interests My experiences Your experiences
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Defining our Terms Civic Literacy Project
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Three Key Phases
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What does problem identification entail? Taking students’ knowledge and experiences seriously Using strategies that will surface students’ voices and pressing concerns Independent writing Open forums “Take a stand” activities
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What does problem exploration entail? Building a historical framework Analyzing multiple perspectives Utilizing various multimodal resources Journalism and other informational texts Poetry and song Film, television, and photographs Community-specific knowledge “Expert” knowledge Student knowledge Studying the resources through critique and conversation
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What does action entail? Reaching outside of the classroom Projecting a clear message for real change to an authentic audience Using multiple modalities Persuasive and investigative writing Poetry and narrative writing Speeches and presentations Workshops and lobbying Murals Filmmaking Reflecting on the action
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Reactions and Questions Which phases seem exciting? Which phases seem daunting? What openings exist within your organization or school’s curriculum for civic literacy projects?
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Reference Epstein, S. (2014). Teaching civic literacy projects: Student engagement with social problems. New York: Teachers College Press.
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