I wanted to take a moment and share
we are as a class and some of the readings and experiences that have led me to
be in this particular space and time with my students. As I am spending this
Georgia State semester considering and reconsidering Critical Pedagogy, I have
come to understand the heart of my study of voice is really a quest for a
Critical Pedagogy, and specifically, a Critical Literacy, in our
classroom. As a
first grade teacher who works with open-minded six and seven-year olds and as a
Liberal Arts College educated woman who was taught to challenge the “is” for
the “what could be,” I see the core of Critical Pedagogy in Critical Literacy.
Ira Shore writes that Critical Literacy is founded in the reality that
“we are
what we say and do. The way we speak and are spoken to help shape us into the
people we become. Through words and other actions, we build ourselves in a
world that is building us. . . Yet, though language is fateful in teaching us
what kind of people to become and what kind of society to make, discourse is
not destiny. We can redefine ourselves and remake society, if we choose,
through alternative rhetoric and dissident projects. This is where critical
literacy begins, for questioning power relations, discourses, and identities in
a world not yet finished, just, or humane”
(1).
Shore’s words resonate with the critical
teacher that I am working to become and call into question the ways I am
setting kids up to become the people they truly are and desire to be, rather
than becoming what the sweeping systems
of accountability and cut-and-dry standards
say they should be. While I
believe that the public school system can work against Critical Literacy in
difficult and iron-gripping ways, I also believe that the vision and heartbeat
of my charter school community and leadership “to give voice, courage, and hope to refugee, immigrant, and local
children” leave space for Critical Literacy to take root and push up beyond the
ground in spite of deafening accountability measures. To put it simply, I have
space to rethink what I am doing with my students in my classroom on a day to
day basis. As I have explored what
Critical Literacy is and what Critical Literacy means for my context as an
educator in a unique, charter school setting, I have found vivid anecdotes in A
Critical Inquiry Framework for K-12 Teachers.
The opening pages by editor JoBeth Allen explain that “critical
literacy. . . is a central curricular manifestation of critical pedagogy.
Reading and writing must be for “something that children need and that we too
need,” noted Freire (1998, p.24); literacy must be meaningful to students and
serve a purpose in their lives” (7).
So, I found myself
considering how I can provide “dissident projects” and literacy that is “meaningful
to students and serve a purpose in their lives.” With this in my head and heart, I had the
opportunity to watch a TED Talk that was shared with me by my former roommate
entitled “Build a School in the Cloud” by Sugata Mitra. Mitra shares his
experience of putting computers with high level concepts (i.e. Biochemistry) in
English into walls in slums and rural villages of India (where children do not
speak English) and finding that students not only learned English, but also
learned the high-level concepts described in English. I encourage you to watch the video to really
understand his experience and argument, but he closes declaring that perhaps we
need to shift from a school system that produces similar children as if for
parts of a machine to “learning as the process of self-organizing,” for, “it’s
not about making learning happen, but setting opportunities up and then
standing back and watching children learn with admiration.” Check out the video here: http://www.ted.com/talks/sugata_mitra_build_a_school_in_the_cloud.html
With thoughts about
Critical Pedagogy and Critical Literacy swirling around in my head, and with
the inspiration of this TED Talk, I thought back to a project I had seen before
when observing in a high income public school about two years ago called “The
Resident Expert Project.” I realized that my work with a small
group of students was inspiring me to rethink my during-the-day curriculum
structures and that this project might be a way to do so. In this project, students choose a topic they are interested
in and then pursued understanding of this topic and selected a way in which to
share their learning. They were now the “resident expert” of their classroom in
their chosen topic. I saw them give oral
presentations and show posters. What if
I proposed this same project in my classroom and integrated our first science standards about the basic needs of
animals by setting kids up to select any animal to become an expert on? What if
instead of just making posters and doing oral reports they could do sculpture,
write poetry and songs, create T.V. commercials or puppet shows, build
habitats, create new board games, make books, or share their information in any
way they could think of. So, I tried this. I knew that this was a project that
would matter to them and that integrated reading (especially non-fiction texts)
and writing and inquiry and science and collaboration. I set them up by providing texts about
different animals and modeling how to read a non-fiction texts, mark facts that
are interesting, and write them in your own words. Then, I sat back and “watched
in admiration” as students curled up in corners and composed songs about wild
horses and created board games about lions with cards that say, “Your pride (family
group) is in danger, move back 2 spaces” or “You just caught a zebra for
dinner, move forward 3 spaces.” At first
the project was individual, but students began to pair up or even form groups
of three. A group of girls kept their original topics but decided to make one
nature show about both chameleons and wild horses. How beautiful that I didn’t tell them what to
do and that they came up with ideas far more creative than I could have offered
them. How much they are learning about the pouches of marsupials, the ears of
polar bears, or the cold-blood of alligators!
In this way, with this student engagement (that we engaged in everyday
and carried over a couple of weeks) I was able to see the power of student
voice and self-expression. We were accomplishing standards, but we were
doing so in a way much less controlled by the teachers and much more controlled
by the students themselves. I got to sit
back and provide scraps of material or popsicle sticks or index cards or
whatever it was that the particular child needed to communicate their
particular animal expertise with the world.
Maggie, the quote on critical literacy (“we are what we say and do. The way we speak and are spoken to help shape us into the people we become. Through words and other actions, we build ourselves in a world that is building us. . . Yet, though language is fateful in teaching us what kind of people to become and what kind of society to make, discourse is not destiny. We can redefine ourselves and remake society, if we choose, through alternative rhetoric and dissident projects. This is where critical literacy begins, for questioning power relations, discourses, and identities in a world not yet finished, just, or humane”) is amazing! I'm so intrigued by the critical literacy you are cultivating in your students - it appears that you are really enabling them to become critical readers. It will be an indispensable life skill and an ongoing journey; you said you are trying to become a critically literate teacher and I think that we'll all be on that road for the rest of our lives. What you're working on with your students is beautiful.
ReplyDelete-Sellers
First off I love the title, because it does take exactly these things when teaching and working with our learners in this way joy and courage. The TED talk was awesome it is so powerful to let children go and learn. When you look at the development we say so much about inspiring learning yet when we have the opportunity to teach in this matter we often times fail. I would love to hear more about the setting up of these opportunities for growth with our learners.
ReplyDelete-Jon