The Situated Cases


Autoria(s): Comber, Barbara; Kerkham, Lyn
Contribuinte(s)

Dyson, Anne

Data(s)

2016

Resumo

In this chapter, we meet the eight children whose documented lives are the heart of this book. The children are spread across 6 continents, so we have some textual traveling to do. We find each child in a local school. There they venture into literacy along official paths negotiated with their teachers and, also, along unofficial paths tied to their desire for peer companionship and social belonging (Corsaro, 2011; Nelson, 2007). We are most interested in their literate productions—their composing, be it with stick and dirt, pencil, crayons, and paper, tablet computer, or chalk and slate. Each child is a unique story, and each story is told by an author with particular interests in the goings-on in school, that is, with a particular angle of vision. All the authors, though, take us into a child’s educational circumstance; they give us a sense of the school’s physical site and its official curricular guidelines. Most importantly, they collectively allow us a global view of children as symbol users and social participants in the official and the unofficial worlds of school. No matter where young children go to school, they are expected to learn to “write” (although writing, as the cases illustrate, does not always mean “composing”)...

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/93625/

Publicador

Routledge

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/93625/3/93625.pdf

Comber, Barbara & Kerkham, Lyn (2016) The Situated Cases. In Dyson, Anne (Ed.) Child Cultures, Schooling and Literacy: Global Perspectives on Children Composing Their Lives. Routledge, New York & London, pp. 53-64.

Direitos

Copyright 2016 Routledge

Fonte

Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #130200 CURRICULUM AND PEDAGOGY
Tipo

Book Chapter