Anne-Marie Hall

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Who Reads Hall

Anne-Marie Hall's work travels primarily in Composition & Writing Studies (81% of indexed citations) · 11 total indexed citations from 3 clusters.

By cluster

  • Composition & Writing Studies — 9
  • Community Literacy — 1
  • Digital & Multimodal — 1

Counts include only citations from indexed journals that deposit reference lists with CrossRef. Authors whose readers publish primarily in venues without reference deposits will appear less central than they are. See coverage notes →

  1. Nomadic Thinking and Vagabond Research: Identifying and Exploring Ecological Literacies
    Abstract

    The author conducted a seven-month ethnography of literacy practices in Mexico in 2003-2004 and returned in 2013 to conduct a follow-up inquiry. This essay traces both the researcher’s disillusionment with traditional, school-based literacy programs, curricula, and assessment consortiums as practiced in many postcolonial countries, and her growing interest in what she calls “ecological literacy.” The study narrates the lives of two Mexican students’ engagements with ecological literacy to argue that literacy as tested and valued in international organizations (PISA, UNESCO, etc.) is highly overrated; indeed, it is a “literacy myth” that success in autonomous literacy has any redeeming effect on the majority of material lives in countries such as Mexico, who suffer from uneven effects of the global economy. In ecological literacy, students have opportunities for action—affordances that alter lives if perceived and utilized. The author argues for a new narrative about literacy, one that understands literacy as ecological by tracing the embodied and experienced literacies of two students, ultimately elaborating on what literacy might look like if we open ourselves to the multiple literacies of most of the world. This essay also argues that traditional literacy assessments neglect to consider how individuals use literacy to navigate an environment impacted by certain global economic policies.

    doi:10.59236/rjv14i2pp78-101
  2. Del Otro Lado: Literacy and Migration across the U.S.–Mexico Border
    Abstract

    There are few researchers today in rhetoric and composition, particularly in emerging literacies, who are talking about transnational literacy practices and the effects of a changing global economy on migration and thus on literacy.In Del Otro Lado: Literacy and Migration across the U.S.-Mexico Border,

    doi:10.25148/clj.9.2.009293
  3. The Word and the World: The Cultural Politics of Literacy in Brazil
    doi:10.25148/clj.9.1.009305
  4. Symposium: On the Framework for Success in Postsecondary Writing
    Abstract

    This symposium centers on the recently released Framework for Success in Postsecondary Writing, a collaboration between the Council of Writing Program Administrators, the National Council of Teachers of English, and the National Writing Project. In addition to the document itself, the symposium features an introduction to it by some of its drafters, as well as responses to it by veteran composition specialists.

    doi:10.58680/ce201220310
  5. Handbook of Research on Writing: History, Society, School, Individual, Text. Charles Bazerman, Ed
    doi:10.25148/clj.4.2.009446
  6. Writing with Authority: Students' Roles as Writers in Cross-National Perspective, David Foster: Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2006. ix-xxiii + 193 pages. $19.95 paperback
    doi:10.1080/07350190701578056