1st Edition

Teenagers, Literacy and School Researching in Multilingual Contexts

By Ken Cruickshank Copyright 2006
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    This unique and timely book follows the experiences of four Arabic teenagers, their families and their community, focusing on the role of literacy in their daily lives and the differences between home and school. The author looks at the conflict between expectations and practices at school and in the home, arguing that problems are inevitable where class and cultural differences exist.

    Emerging themes include:

    • how literacy practices in the community are undergoing rapid change due to global developments in technology
    • how the patterns of written and spoken language in English and Arabic in the home are linked with social practices in logical and coherent ways
    • how many of the family practices that differ from school culture and language become marginalised.

    Built around these insightful case studies yet grounded in theory, this book is of immediate relevance to teachers working in multicultural contexts and students and lecturers in language/literacy or on TESOL courses.

    Part 1.  1. Patterns of Community Literacy  2. Pathway(s) to Literacy  3. Change and Literacy Practices: Teenagers and Technology  4. Mediation in Community and School Literacy  5. Conflict and Control: Literacy as Management  6. Identity, Place and Identity  Part 2: A Harbourful of Yachts: Making Sense of Literacy Research  8. No Single Answer: What Schools Can and Can’t do  9. Researching in Multilingual/Multicultural Contexts  10. A Harbourful of Yachts: Making Sense of Literacy Research  11. Researching Reading and Writing in Homes and Schools 

    Biography

    Ken Cruickshank is a Lecturer in TESOL and Languages in the Faculty of Education, University of Sydney. He has previously worked in primary and secondary schools and with the department of education in Australia.