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Literacy by Ellen Cushman, Eugene R. Kintgen, Barry Kroll, Mike Rose - First Edition, 2001 from Macmillan Student Store
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Literacy

First  Edition|©2001  Ellen Cushman, Eugene R. Kintgen, Barry Kroll, Mike Rose

  • About
  • Contents
  • Authors

About

Contents

Table of Contents

CONTENTS

Acknowledgments iii

INTRODUCTION: SURVEYING THE FIELD 

Part One TECHNOLOGIES FOR LITERACY

1 Writing Is a Technology that Restructures Thought

WALTER J. ONG, S.J.
Claiming that writing transforms human consciousness, Ong discusses numerous consequences of writing, emphasizing the ways in which it separates the knower from what is known.

2 What’s in a List?

JACK GOODY
In this excerpt from The Domestication of the Savage Mind, Goody surveys ancient examples of lists to show how they constitute a technology of literacy that allows (and in fact encourages) history, the observational sciences, and classification schemes.

3 The Lost World of Colonial Handwriting

TAMARA PLAKINS THORNTON
Thornton, a historian, explores the ways in which handwriting in the American colonies served as a "medium of self," with different hands reserved for men and women, for those in different professions, and for those in various social stations.

4 From Pencils to Pixels: The Stages of Literacy Technologies

DENNIS BARON
Baron situates the computer in a series of communication technologies — including writing, the pencil, and the telephone — to argue that different technologies interact with literacy in often unexpected ways.

5 The Effect of Hypertext on Processes of Reading and Writing

DAVIDA CHARNEY
Raising a cautionary voice about computer technology, Charney explores some ways in which the freedom that hypertext allows readers also makes it more difficult for them to make sense of texts, to extract information from them, and to register that information in long-term memory.

Part Two LITERACY, KNOWLEDGE, AND COGNITION

6 Writing and the Mind

DAVID R. OLSON
Opposing the traditional theory that writing developed out of a need to model speech, Olson argues that writing has instead functioned historically to provide humankind with a new way to think about language itself.

7 Unpackaging Literacy

SLYVIA SCRIBNER AND MICHAEL COLE
Drawn from a classic empirical study of literacy, the authors report on a West African people who use three writing systems, including one that is independent of formal education; the results suggest modest and specific, rather than profound and broad, effects of literacy on cognition.

8 Literacy and Individual Consciousness

F. NIYI AKINNASO
The author draws on his personal experience growing up in a nonliterate environment in Nigeria and on his Western academic training to provide a sense of the role literacy played in the religious, economic, and political life of his village and also the various effects it had on his own interpersonal relations, acquisition of knowledge, and sense of identity.

9 Lessons from Research with Language-Minority Children

LUIS C. MOLL AND NORMA GONZÀLEZ
With an eye toward influencing literacy assessment and pedagogical practice, the authors consider the effects that the common household’s "funds of knowledge" can have on the development of literacy if that knowledge is honored and if its relationship to literacy is fostered.

10 A New Framework for Understanding Cognition and Affect in Writing

JOHN R. HAYES
Hayes, a cognitive psychologist, attempts to model the complex mental processes involved in producing and revising written language.

11 Distributed Cognition at Work

PATRICK DIAS, AVIVA FREEDMAN, PETER MEDWAY, AND ANTHONY PARÈ
Through an examination of literacy practices in the Bank of Canada, the authors illustrate the ways that literacy can be distributed across a complex organization.

Part Three HISTORIES OF LITERACY IN THE UNITED STATES 

12 The Nineteenth-Century Origins of Our Times

HARVEY J. GRAFF
Graff offers a general survey of literacy and education in nineteenth-century America, including literacy among minority and immigrant groups.

13 Misperspectives on Literacy: A Critique of an Anglocentric Bias in Histories of American Literacy

JAMIE CANDELARIA GREENE 
The author provides a corrective to mainstream historical accounts of literacy by examining one of the earliest — and subsequently most overlooked — literacies in North America: literacy in Spanish during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in Mexico, Central America, and the southern half of the present United States.

14 Religious Reading and Readers in Antebellum America

DAVID PAUL NORD
By focusing on reports of itinerant booksellers from Princeton Theological Seminary who distributed religious books and tracts to inhabitants of the New Jersey Pine Barrens in the 1840s, Nord illustrates how difficult it is to make simple generalizations about reading.

15 The Literate and the Literary: African Americans as Writers and Readers — 1830-1940

ELIZABETH MCHENRY AND SHIRLEY BRICE HEATH
The authors strive to balance the notion that African American language and literary habits are primarily rooted in oral traditions by exploring a range of African American literary societies and journals over the course of a century.

16 Kitchen Tables and Rented Rooms: The Extracurriculum of Composition

ANNE RUGGLES GERE
Gere examines literary clubs and books and magazines from colonial times on, illuminating the various ways in which writing instruction relates to questions of power, performance, and cultural work both in the classroom and in the "extracurriculum."

17 Gender, Advertising, and Mass-Circulation Magazines

HELEN DAMON-MOORE AND CARL F. KAESTLE
The authors trace the intersections between gender and the world of commerce in the articles and advertising that made magazines economically viable in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

Part Four LITERACY DEVELOPMENT

18 Theoretical Approaches to Reading Instruction

MARILYN JAGER ADAMS
With current educational policies in mind, Adams provides a historical overview of theories and methods of reading instruction and advocates a pedagogy that integrates several of those approaches.

19 The Development of Initial Literacy

YETTA GOODMAN
An advocate of "whole language" literacy instruction, Goodman details the kinds of knowledge about literacy that young children acquire naturally from their environment.

20 Coach Bombay’s Kids Learn to Write: Children’s Appropriation of Media Material for School Literacy

ANNE HAAS DYSON
Relying on a sociocultural theoretical framework, this ethnographic study examines the ways that children appropriate figures and themes from popular media into school literacy events.

21 Learning to Read Biology: One Student’s Rhetorical Development in College

CHRISTANA HAAS
Haas examines the development of specialized literacy by tracking a biology major through her undergraduate years, detailing the changes in her understanding and use of texts as she becomes socialized into a scientific discipline.

22 Living Literacy: Rethinking Development in Adulthood

SUSAN S. LYTLE
Lytle suggests that stereotypes and common assumptions about adult learners who are not in the educational mainstream blind us to the knowledge they possess and the social networks they inhabit, and discourage close observation of the complex reading and writing processes they use.

23 A World Without Print

VICTORIA PURCELL-GATES
The author provides a sense of the lived experience of some people with low literacy skills through a study of an adult couple and the effects of their limited literacy on their children.

Part Five CULTURE AND COMMUNITY

24 The Ethnography of Literacy

JOHN F. SZWED
An anthropologist argues for the study of literacy as a social practice and offers a methodology for studying literacy in its everyday settings.

25 The New Literacy Studies

BRIAN STREET
Street provides a scholarly agenda for literacy studies that stresses the importance of ethnography for studying the ways literacy practices are ideologically based.

26 Protean Shapes in Literacy Events: Ever-Shifting Oral and Literate Traditions
 

SHIRLEY BRICE HEATH
To complicate earlier categorizations of literacy and culture, Heath analyzes ethnographic research of the "literacy events" in two small southern U.S. communities to demonstrate the complex interplay of culture, orality, and literacy.

27 En Los Dos Idiomas: Literacy Practices Among Chicago Mexicanos

MARCIA FARR
Farr explores the ways in which literacy is learned outside of school through social networks and used in religious, commercial, civic, and educational contexts.

28 Language and Literacy in American Indian and Alaska Native Communities

TERESA L. MCCARTY AND LUCILLE J. WATAHOMIGIE
The authors discuss the difficulties involved in developing curricular materials to facilitate second language acquisition among Navajo schoolchildren, particularly because these materials must straddle overlapping and competing cultural value systems.

Part Six POWER, PRIVILEGE, AND DISCOURSE

29 Inventing the University

DAVID BARTHOLOMAE
Bartholomae argues that students are pressured to adopt positions of authority from which to address academic audiences, but that their efforts reveal their mimicry of academic discourse more than their fluency in it.

30 Literacy, Discourse, and Linguistics: Introduction and What is Literacy?

JAMES PAUL GEE
Gee differentiates between primary discourse (acquired through home and community) and secondary discourse (learned in broader social contexts and institutions) and poses a theory about the relation of discourse, identity, and social-linguistic fluency.

31 The Politics of Teaching Literate Discourse

LISA DELPIT
Qualifying Gee’s analysis, Delpit argues that linguistic acquisition is possible through classroom immersion in secondary discourse, yet also acknowledges how problematic the move between discursive communities has been for many African Americans.

32 Sponsors of Literacy

DEBORAH BRANDT
Brandt draws on literacy narratives gathered from over one hundred participants ranging in age from nine to ninety-nine to argue that becoming literate — both within and outside educational contexts — is dependent on a range of social, political, and economic forces.

33 Community Literacy

WAYNE CAMPBELL PECK, LINDA FLOWER, AND LORRAINE HIGGINS
The authors report on a service-learning project that enables college students and community teens to create a hybrid discourse in order to address local political and social issues.

Part Seven MOBILIZING LITERACY: WORK AND SOCIAL CHANGE

34 National Literacy Campaigns

ROBERT F. ARNOVE AND HARVEY J. GRAFF
The authors review a wide range of literacy campaigns over the past four hundred years, outlining key points in the development of literacy movements, including goals, materials, methods, and evaluation.

35 The Adult Literacy Process as Cultural Action for Freedom and Education and Conscientização

PAULO FREIRE
Often cited as a foundational view in critical pedagogy, Freire’s work also represents the empowering political potential of the literacy campaign, particularly as it developed in Brazil.

36 Women and Literacy: A Quest for Justice

LALITA RAMDAS
Ramdas finds that literacy campaigners often hold problematic perceptions of women and argues that the perspectives and lived conditions of women must be included in program development.

37 Adult Literacy in America

IRWIN S. KIRSCH, ANN JUNGEBLUT, LYNN JENKINS, AND ANDREW KOLSTAD
The authors present a statistical analysis of the correlations among mass literacy, income, and profession in the United States, suggesting the potential impact of literacy campaigns and educational systems.

38 Hearing Other Voices: A Critical Assessment of Popular Views on Literacy and Work

GLYNDA HULL
Hull examines public discourse about literacy and the work force, pointing out that workplace literacy programs and the industry leaders who support them often have reductive perceptions of workers.

Notes and References

Notes on the Authors

Notes on the Editors

Index

Authors

Ellen Cushman

Ellen Cushman is Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, Diversity and Inclusion and Dean’s Professor of Civic Sustainability in the College of Social Sciences and Humanities at Northeastern University in Boston, MA. She served as co-editor with Mary Juzwik of Research in the Teaching of English (2012-2017) and published two books on literacy studies in an inner city community (The Struggle and The Tools, SUNY 1998) and the Cherokee Nation (The Cherokee Syllabary, University of Oklahoma Press, 2012) . She received her PhD from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.


Eugene R. Kintgen


Barry Kroll

Barry M. Kroll teaches in the English Department at Lehigh University, where he is Robert Rodale Professor of Writing.  His research has focused on the development of audience awareness in children's and adolescents' writing, college students' responses to the literature of the Vietnam War, and, most recently, the relevance of martial arts movements and contemplative practices for teaching alternative approaches to arguing about disputed issues.


Mike Rose

Mike Rose is a Research Professor in the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. He is a member of the National Academy of Education and the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Grawemeyer Award in Education, and awards from the Spencer Foundation, the National Council of Teachers of English, the Modern Language Association, and the American Educational Research Association. He also received the Commonwealth Club of California’s Award for Literary Excellence in Nonfiction. His books include Lives on the Boundary: The Struggles and Achievements of America’s Educationally Underprepared, Possible Lives: The Promise of Public Education in America, The Mind at Work: Valuing the Intelligence of the American Worker, Why School?: Reclaiming Education for All of Us, and Back to School: Why Everyone Deserves a Second Chance at Education.


Table of Contents

CONTENTS

Acknowledgments iii

INTRODUCTION: SURVEYING THE FIELD 

Part One TECHNOLOGIES FOR LITERACY

1 Writing Is a Technology that Restructures Thought

WALTER J. ONG, S.J.
Claiming that writing transforms human consciousness, Ong discusses numerous consequences of writing, emphasizing the ways in which it separates the knower from what is known.

2 What’s in a List?

JACK GOODY
In this excerpt from The Domestication of the Savage Mind, Goody surveys ancient examples of lists to show how they constitute a technology of literacy that allows (and in fact encourages) history, the observational sciences, and classification schemes.

3 The Lost World of Colonial Handwriting

TAMARA PLAKINS THORNTON
Thornton, a historian, explores the ways in which handwriting in the American colonies served as a "medium of self," with different hands reserved for men and women, for those in different professions, and for those in various social stations.

4 From Pencils to Pixels: The Stages of Literacy Technologies

DENNIS BARON
Baron situates the computer in a series of communication technologies — including writing, the pencil, and the telephone — to argue that different technologies interact with literacy in often unexpected ways.

5 The Effect of Hypertext on Processes of Reading and Writing

DAVIDA CHARNEY
Raising a cautionary voice about computer technology, Charney explores some ways in which the freedom that hypertext allows readers also makes it more difficult for them to make sense of texts, to extract information from them, and to register that information in long-term memory.

Part Two LITERACY, KNOWLEDGE, AND COGNITION

6 Writing and the Mind

DAVID R. OLSON
Opposing the traditional theory that writing developed out of a need to model speech, Olson argues that writing has instead functioned historically to provide humankind with a new way to think about language itself.

7 Unpackaging Literacy

SLYVIA SCRIBNER AND MICHAEL COLE
Drawn from a classic empirical study of literacy, the authors report on a West African people who use three writing systems, including one that is independent of formal education; the results suggest modest and specific, rather than profound and broad, effects of literacy on cognition.

8 Literacy and Individual Consciousness

F. NIYI AKINNASO
The author draws on his personal experience growing up in a nonliterate environment in Nigeria and on his Western academic training to provide a sense of the role literacy played in the religious, economic, and political life of his village and also the various effects it had on his own interpersonal relations, acquisition of knowledge, and sense of identity.

9 Lessons from Research with Language-Minority Children

LUIS C. MOLL AND NORMA GONZÀLEZ
With an eye toward influencing literacy assessment and pedagogical practice, the authors consider the effects that the common household’s "funds of knowledge" can have on the development of literacy if that knowledge is honored and if its relationship to literacy is fostered.

10 A New Framework for Understanding Cognition and Affect in Writing

JOHN R. HAYES
Hayes, a cognitive psychologist, attempts to model the complex mental processes involved in producing and revising written language.

11 Distributed Cognition at Work

PATRICK DIAS, AVIVA FREEDMAN, PETER MEDWAY, AND ANTHONY PARÈ
Through an examination of literacy practices in the Bank of Canada, the authors illustrate the ways that literacy can be distributed across a complex organization.

Part Three HISTORIES OF LITERACY IN THE UNITED STATES 

12 The Nineteenth-Century Origins of Our Times

HARVEY J. GRAFF
Graff offers a general survey of literacy and education in nineteenth-century America, including literacy among minority and immigrant groups.

13 Misperspectives on Literacy: A Critique of an Anglocentric Bias in Histories of American Literacy

JAMIE CANDELARIA GREENE 
The author provides a corrective to mainstream historical accounts of literacy by examining one of the earliest — and subsequently most overlooked — literacies in North America: literacy in Spanish during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in Mexico, Central America, and the southern half of the present United States.

14 Religious Reading and Readers in Antebellum America

DAVID PAUL NORD
By focusing on reports of itinerant booksellers from Princeton Theological Seminary who distributed religious books and tracts to inhabitants of the New Jersey Pine Barrens in the 1840s, Nord illustrates how difficult it is to make simple generalizations about reading.

15 The Literate and the Literary: African Americans as Writers and Readers — 1830-1940

ELIZABETH MCHENRY AND SHIRLEY BRICE HEATH
The authors strive to balance the notion that African American language and literary habits are primarily rooted in oral traditions by exploring a range of African American literary societies and journals over the course of a century.

16 Kitchen Tables and Rented Rooms: The Extracurriculum of Composition

ANNE RUGGLES GERE
Gere examines literary clubs and books and magazines from colonial times on, illuminating the various ways in which writing instruction relates to questions of power, performance, and cultural work both in the classroom and in the "extracurriculum."

17 Gender, Advertising, and Mass-Circulation Magazines

HELEN DAMON-MOORE AND CARL F. KAESTLE
The authors trace the intersections between gender and the world of commerce in the articles and advertising that made magazines economically viable in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

Part Four LITERACY DEVELOPMENT

18 Theoretical Approaches to Reading Instruction

MARILYN JAGER ADAMS
With current educational policies in mind, Adams provides a historical overview of theories and methods of reading instruction and advocates a pedagogy that integrates several of those approaches.

19 The Development of Initial Literacy

YETTA GOODMAN
An advocate of "whole language" literacy instruction, Goodman details the kinds of knowledge about literacy that young children acquire naturally from their environment.

20 Coach Bombay’s Kids Learn to Write: Children’s Appropriation of Media Material for School Literacy

ANNE HAAS DYSON
Relying on a sociocultural theoretical framework, this ethnographic study examines the ways that children appropriate figures and themes from popular media into school literacy events.

21 Learning to Read Biology: One Student’s Rhetorical Development in College

CHRISTANA HAAS
Haas examines the development of specialized literacy by tracking a biology major through her undergraduate years, detailing the changes in her understanding and use of texts as she becomes socialized into a scientific discipline.

22 Living Literacy: Rethinking Development in Adulthood

SUSAN S. LYTLE
Lytle suggests that stereotypes and common assumptions about adult learners who are not in the educational mainstream blind us to the knowledge they possess and the social networks they inhabit, and discourage close observation of the complex reading and writing processes they use.

23 A World Without Print

VICTORIA PURCELL-GATES
The author provides a sense of the lived experience of some people with low literacy skills through a study of an adult couple and the effects of their limited literacy on their children.

Part Five CULTURE AND COMMUNITY

24 The Ethnography of Literacy

JOHN F. SZWED
An anthropologist argues for the study of literacy as a social practice and offers a methodology for studying literacy in its everyday settings.

25 The New Literacy Studies

BRIAN STREET
Street provides a scholarly agenda for literacy studies that stresses the importance of ethnography for studying the ways literacy practices are ideologically based.

26 Protean Shapes in Literacy Events: Ever-Shifting Oral and Literate Traditions
 

SHIRLEY BRICE HEATH
To complicate earlier categorizations of literacy and culture, Heath analyzes ethnographic research of the "literacy events" in two small southern U.S. communities to demonstrate the complex interplay of culture, orality, and literacy.

27 En Los Dos Idiomas: Literacy Practices Among Chicago Mexicanos

MARCIA FARR
Farr explores the ways in which literacy is learned outside of school through social networks and used in religious, commercial, civic, and educational contexts.

28 Language and Literacy in American Indian and Alaska Native Communities

TERESA L. MCCARTY AND LUCILLE J. WATAHOMIGIE
The authors discuss the difficulties involved in developing curricular materials to facilitate second language acquisition among Navajo schoolchildren, particularly because these materials must straddle overlapping and competing cultural value systems.

Part Six POWER, PRIVILEGE, AND DISCOURSE

29 Inventing the University

DAVID BARTHOLOMAE
Bartholomae argues that students are pressured to adopt positions of authority from which to address academic audiences, but that their efforts reveal their mimicry of academic discourse more than their fluency in it.

30 Literacy, Discourse, and Linguistics: Introduction and What is Literacy?

JAMES PAUL GEE
Gee differentiates between primary discourse (acquired through home and community) and secondary discourse (learned in broader social contexts and institutions) and poses a theory about the relation of discourse, identity, and social-linguistic fluency.

31 The Politics of Teaching Literate Discourse

LISA DELPIT
Qualifying Gee’s analysis, Delpit argues that linguistic acquisition is possible through classroom immersion in secondary discourse, yet also acknowledges how problematic the move between discursive communities has been for many African Americans.

32 Sponsors of Literacy

DEBORAH BRANDT
Brandt draws on literacy narratives gathered from over one hundred participants ranging in age from nine to ninety-nine to argue that becoming literate — both within and outside educational contexts — is dependent on a range of social, political, and economic forces.

33 Community Literacy

WAYNE CAMPBELL PECK, LINDA FLOWER, AND LORRAINE HIGGINS
The authors report on a service-learning project that enables college students and community teens to create a hybrid discourse in order to address local political and social issues.

Part Seven MOBILIZING LITERACY: WORK AND SOCIAL CHANGE

34 National Literacy Campaigns

ROBERT F. ARNOVE AND HARVEY J. GRAFF
The authors review a wide range of literacy campaigns over the past four hundred years, outlining key points in the development of literacy movements, including goals, materials, methods, and evaluation.

35 The Adult Literacy Process as Cultural Action for Freedom and Education and Conscientização

PAULO FREIRE
Often cited as a foundational view in critical pedagogy, Freire’s work also represents the empowering political potential of the literacy campaign, particularly as it developed in Brazil.

36 Women and Literacy: A Quest for Justice

LALITA RAMDAS
Ramdas finds that literacy campaigners often hold problematic perceptions of women and argues that the perspectives and lived conditions of women must be included in program development.

37 Adult Literacy in America

IRWIN S. KIRSCH, ANN JUNGEBLUT, LYNN JENKINS, AND ANDREW KOLSTAD
The authors present a statistical analysis of the correlations among mass literacy, income, and profession in the United States, suggesting the potential impact of literacy campaigns and educational systems.

38 Hearing Other Voices: A Critical Assessment of Popular Views on Literacy and Work

GLYNDA HULL
Hull examines public discourse about literacy and the work force, pointing out that workplace literacy programs and the industry leaders who support them often have reductive perceptions of workers.

Notes and References

Notes on the Authors

Notes on the Editors

Index

Ellen Cushman

Ellen Cushman is Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, Diversity and Inclusion and Dean’s Professor of Civic Sustainability in the College of Social Sciences and Humanities at Northeastern University in Boston, MA. She served as co-editor with Mary Juzwik of Research in the Teaching of English (2012-2017) and published two books on literacy studies in an inner city community (The Struggle and The Tools, SUNY 1998) and the Cherokee Nation (The Cherokee Syllabary, University of Oklahoma Press, 2012) . She received her PhD from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.


Eugene R. Kintgen


Barry Kroll

Barry M. Kroll teaches in the English Department at Lehigh University, where he is Robert Rodale Professor of Writing.  His research has focused on the development of audience awareness in children's and adolescents' writing, college students' responses to the literature of the Vietnam War, and, most recently, the relevance of martial arts movements and contemplative practices for teaching alternative approaches to arguing about disputed issues.


Mike Rose

Mike Rose is a Research Professor in the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. He is a member of the National Academy of Education and the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Grawemeyer Award in Education, and awards from the Spencer Foundation, the National Council of Teachers of English, the Modern Language Association, and the American Educational Research Association. He also received the Commonwealth Club of California’s Award for Literary Excellence in Nonfiction. His books include Lives on the Boundary: The Struggles and Achievements of America’s Educationally Underprepared, Possible Lives: The Promise of Public Education in America, The Mind at Work: Valuing the Intelligence of the American Worker, Why School?: Reclaiming Education for All of Us, and Back to School: Why Everyone Deserves a Second Chance at Education.


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