Amy Stornaiuolo
23 articles-
Abstract
This article explores the mobile and material dimensions of a writing practice we call pocket writing. Emergent in our 6-year ethnographic fieldwork at a public high school, this practice involved adolescents composing and carrying their self-sponsored writing close to their bodies. We consider the pocket both a physical artifact—the place from which writing emerged at the right moment—and a metaphor describing how youth created small, portable boundaries around their writing to facilitate its invisibility and mobility. Using a transliteracies lens, we worked alongside youth to trace the circulatory pathways such writing took relative to the official institution of school. These high school students made agentive rhetorical choices, sometimes deliberately disconnecting their writing from school as an everyday resistance practice—an effort to keep school in its place. In theorizing pocket writing as a mobile and embodied extension of writing (for) the self, we argue its “pocketed” nature is key to its transformative power.
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Editors’ Introduction: Seeds of Hope: Reflecting on Five Years of Research in the Teaching of English ↗
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Seeds of Hope: Reflecting on Five Years of Research in the Teaching of English, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/57/4/researchintheteachingofenglish32470-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Multimodal Research for Racial Justice, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/57/3/researchintheteachingofenglish32352-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: The Future as Collaborative: Reading and Writing, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/57/2/researchintheteachingofenglish32150-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Black Origin Stories and Futures, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/57/1/researchintheteachingofenglish31998-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Storying and Restorying as Cathartic Hope, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/56/4/researchintheteachingofenglish31861-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Centering Disability in Literacy, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/56/3/researchintheteachingofenglish31636-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Literacy and Imperialism, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/56/2/researchintheteachingofenglish31473-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors' Introduction: Childhoods across Borders, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/56/1/researchintheteachingofenglish31340-1.gif
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Informed by Bakhtin's theorization of voice as well as cross-disciplinary studies of scaling, the authors explore how a group of young filmmakers rendered one focal immigrant student's familial history by centering speakers addressing the topic of immigration from multiple levels, thereby connecting multiple social and spatiotemporal contexts in their multimodal storytelling to illustrate the costs of dehumanizing policies. In this case study, drawing from classroom observations, student work, and interviews with both students and teachers, the authors also highlight the importance of teacher agency in creating opportunities for refugee-background students to interactively engage in the language arts classroom. Drawing from interviews, observations, and analysis of student writing, the authors construct a detailed case study of how one student writer negotiated her stance toward the discourse of literary analysis based on her own writerly identity as a creative writer, illuminating the importance of critically attending to the ideological implications of teaching discipline-specific writing.
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Editors’ Introduction: “You Can Still Fight”: The Black Radical Tradition, Healing, and Literacies ↗
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: “You Can Still Fight”: The Black Radical Tradition, Healing, and Literacies, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/55/3/researchintheteachingofenglish31183-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Drawing Out the A in English Language Arts, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/55/2/researchintheteachingofenglish31019-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Literacy Policy-as-Pharmakon: Indeterminacy in a Time of Contagion, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/55/1/researchintheteachingofenglish30898-1.gif
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Editors’ Introduction: Decentering and Decentralizing Literacy Studies: An Urgent Call for Our Field ↗
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Preview this article: Editors' Introduction: Decentering and Decentralizing Literacy Studies: An Urgent Call for Our Field, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/54/4/researchintheteachingofenglish30735-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Literacy, Migration, and Dislocation, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/54/3/researchintheteachingofenglish30518-1.gif
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Editors’ Introduction: Critical Digital and Media Literacies in Challenging Times: Reimagining the Role of English Language Arts ↗
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Preview this article: Editors' Introduction: Critical Digital and Media Literacies in Challenging Times: Reimagining the Role of English Language Arts, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/54/2/researchintheteachingofenglish30639-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors' Introduction: The Politics of Teaching Literature, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/54/1/researchintheteachingofenglish30238-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Ethics and Literacy Research, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/53/4/researchintheteachingofenglish30139-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Toward Methodological Pluralism: The Geopolitics of Knowing, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/53/3/researchintheteachingofenglish30033-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors’ Introduction: Collective Knowledge Production and Action, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/53/2/researchintheteachingofenglish29862-1.gif
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Preview this article: Editors' Introduction: Bridging Generations in RTE: Reading the Past, Writing the Future, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/rte/53/1/researchintheteachingofenglish29752-1.gif
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Scaling as a Literacy Activity: Mobility and Educational Inequality in an Age of Global Connectivity ↗
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This article takes up an area of central concern for educators in an era of global connectivity: howto account for the mobility of people, texts, and practices while simultaneously addressing persistent educational inequalities. In attending to the ways people participate in unequal globalized contexts,even educational contexts constructed to bring students and teachers together, we examine how resources such as time, space, materials, national identity, genre, and language are all unequally distributed and unequally ordered in various hierarchies. We propose the notion of scale to offer literacy researchers a flexible conceptual tool with which to examine educational inequities by capturing how movement and mobility are not simple processes of relocation; rather, literacies and texts are always dynamically constructed in relation to hierarchical orders of varying spatial and temporal dimensions. Through multisited ethnography, we engage in a scalar analysis of teachers’ cross-cultural collaborations to illustrate how they produced various categories of space and time (e.g., local, national, global) through routine literacy engagements. In explaining how different scales are invoked, implicated, and constructed in interaction, we find that participants engaged in six scalar moves-upscaling, downscaling, aligning, contesting, anchoring, and embedding-and offer these in response to the pressing need to develop sensitive analytical toolsthat can bring to the surface the ways inequalities are inscribed in literacy practices and texts.Implications of conceptualizing scaling as literacy activity include disrupting smooth narratives of global connectedness in educational collaborations and highlighting the multiscalar nature of all literacy practice.
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Abstract
This November issue of RTE once again contains the Annual Annotated Bibliography of Research in the Teaching of English, available only here, on the NCTE website.