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Talking About Literacy »

Book cover image of Talking About Literacy by Jane Mace

Authors: Jane Mace
ISBN-13: 9780415080446, ISBN-10: 0415080444
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Taylor & Francis, Inc.
Date Published: June 1992
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Jane Mace

Book Synopsis

Talking about Literacy re-examines dominant notions of what litreracy is, and challenges the problem-solution reflex to the issue (the problem is illiteracy: the solution is more literacy). Literacy has enormous emotional and political associations, and the job of literacy educator often concerns changing attitudes and challenging prejudices - whether in the form of publicity strategies, counselling new students, or in curriculum design. In short, adult literacy education means not only teaching courses like 'fresh start', 'basic skills', 'study skills', 'communication skills', 'language support' and 'return to study', but also designing strategies to encourage people to see that these courses may meet their own interests - and educating them and others to rethink their own negative attitudes to 'illiteracy'.
The book looks in detail in at five principles put forward by Jane Mace as central to the education of people who often can read, but wish they could read better; who, technically can write, but have a desire to do so with more expression and coherence. These principles focus on five themes: context, inquiy, authorship, equality and community. Since it is all too easy for literacy education involving adults who do not have formal qualifications to stop short of teaching techniques for 'correct' writing, these principles mean taking seriously a view that adult students are writers as well as readers - that they have an entitlement to be read, as well as to read others.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
To the reader
On writing books
The shape of this book
Pt. IIssues
1Problems of Representation3
Liberating literacy4
The illiterate as someone else7
Authors and interviewees10
Describe or quantify?14
Authentic voices16
2The Truth for Now23
Truths for teachers, truths for students24
Truth or fiction?28
Truth and talk31
Truth and style34
Pt. IIPrinciples
3Listening to the Questions43
Questions: asked and unasked45
Literacy: how do we talk about it?47
Needs and interests50
Context and outreach53
Class and literacy: some themes58
4The Teacher-Researcher64
Researching the interest64
Context and menus69
Researching the answers73
Words and contradictions76
5Authors and Identity83
From private to public84
Rights and responsibilities94
Inspirations96
6Readers Equal Writers102
Reading aloud104
Applause and audience107
Trusting the reader109
Friend or censor?113
7Vocations and Vocationalism119
The workplace as community120
Maps and communities125
Status and literacy127
Communication and community130
8Conclusion140
Afterword144
Notes147
Bibliography158
Index164

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