ulturally Responsive Literacy Academy 1: Literacyy for What? Introductions Facilitator and Sponsors www.nccrest.org Leadership Academies Roles g genda Warm up Activity ecturette 1: 1 Politics P li i andd Literacy Li 40 minutes 20 minutes i ctivity 2: Literacy Assumptions in Standardized Testing 60 minutes reakk 10 minutes i ecturette 2: Literacy for What? 15 minutes ctivity i i 3: 3 CR Literacy Li Action A i Steps S 60 minutes i utcomes Review 10 minutes cademy Outcomes efine literacy xplore the relationship between politics of literacy & arningg xamine the question “Literacy for what?” through a ulturally responsive lens efine culturally responsive literacy nderstand keyy shifts needed to move towards a more ulturally responsive literacy model Lecturette 1: Politics & Literacyy Literacy… Ability to read and write. (American Heritage Dictionary) Use of language to construct personal and public worlds nd to t achieve hi full f ll participation p rti ip ti n in society. i t (NCTE) Literacy is the ability to identify, understand, interpret, reate, communicate and compute, using printed and written materials associated with varying contexts. Literacy nvolves l a continuum ti off learning l r i to t enable bl an individual i di id l o achieve his or her goals, to develop his or her nowledge and potential, and to participate fully in the “Old Deluder Satan Act” “It beingg one chieff point p off the old deluder,, Satan,, to keepp men from knowledge of the Scriptures…It is therefore ordered that every township in this jurisdiction, after the Lord has increased them by the number of fifty householders, shall forthwith appoint one within this town to teach all such children as shall resort to him to write and read… read ” http://personal.pitnet.net/primarysources/deluder.html Common Themes throughout History • Legal battles over whose notions of knowledge, truth and values are considered legitimate • Denial of access to literacy as a controlling means of certain groups • Assessment of literacy using philosophically narrow and biased viewpoints. p Lecturette 2 Literacy for what?” iteracy Models Autonomous Formal Skill Based B d Ideological • Critical Social Practice Culturally Responsive • Multiple Literacies Validating Comprehensive Empowering Student Perspective: Culturally Responsive Literacy Is… Transformative Multidimensional Empowering eacher Perspective: l ll R i Li i IIs… ulturally Responsive Literacy IInstruction ving towards Culturally Responsive Pedagogy: nks’s Model *Contributions C ib i *Additive *Transformative *Social Action ifting towards Culturally Responsive iteracy: Changing Definitions Contributions Additive Transformative Social Action Literacy Reading R di the h Word R Rewriting ii the World Purpose Vocational Aspirations Liberating Tool Literature & Text Canon Multiple Voices Transmission Transaction hifting g Literacyy Definition Literacy Contributions Additive Transformative Social Action Reading the Word Rewriting the World hifting Purpose of Literacy Purpose Contributions Additive Transformative Social Action Vocational Aspirations Liberating Tool hifting Literature & Text Literature & Text Contributions Additive Transformative Social Action Canon Multiple Voices hifting Literacy Instruction Instruction Contributions Additive Transformative Social Action Transmission Transaction uality Literacy Instruction • Occurs in meaningful g contexts • Actively engages students in meaning construction • R Requires i teachers h to h have a repertoire i off iinstructional i l strategies • E Entails t il dynamic d i andd changing h i conceptions pti off the th roles l of teachers and students in instructional encounters