Ebony Elizabeth Thomas

21 articles
University of Pennsylvania ORCID: 0000-0002-5581-8454
  1. Editors’ Introduction: Seeds of Hope: Reflecting on Five Years of Research in the Teaching of English
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202332470
  2. Editors’ Introduction: Multimodal Research for Racial Justice
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202332352
  3. Editors’ Introduction: The Future as Collaborative: Reading and Writing
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202232150
  4. Editors’ Introduction: Black Origin Stories and Futures
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202231998
  5. Editors’ Introduction: Storying and Restorying as Cathartic Hope
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202231861
  6. Editors’ Introduction: Centering Disability in Literacy
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202231636
  7. Editors’ Introduction: Literacy and Imperialism
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202131473
  8. Editors’ Introduction: Childhoods across Borders
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202131340
  9. Editors’ Introduction: Emerging Solidarities in Literacy Research
    Abstract

    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.

    doi:10.58680/rte202131255
  10. Editors’ Introduction: “You Can Still Fight”: The Black Radical Tradition, Healing, and Literacies
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202131183
  11. Editors’ Introduction: Drawing Out the A in English Language Arts
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202031019
  12. Editors’ Introduction: Literacy Policy-as-Pharmakon: Indeterminacy in a Time of Contagion
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202030898
  13. Editors’ Introduction: Decentering and Decentralizing Literacy Studies: An Urgent Call for Our Field
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202030735
  14. Editors’ Introduction: Literacy, Migration, and Dislocation
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte202030518
  15. Editors’ Introduction: Critical Digital and Media Literacies in Challenging Times: Reimagining the Role of English Language Arts
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte201930639
  16. Editors’ Introduction: The Politics of Teaching Literature
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte201930238
  17. Editors’ Introduction: Ethics and Literacy Research
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte201930139
  18. Editors’ Introduction: Toward Methodological Pluralism: The Geopolitics of Knowing
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte201930033
  19. Editors’ Introduction: Collective Knowledge Production and Action
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte201829862
  20. Editors’ Introduction: Bridging Generations in RTE: Reading the Past, Writing the Future
    Abstract

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    doi:10.58680/rte201829752
  21. “We Always Talk About Race”: Navigating Race Talk Dilemmas in the Teaching of Literature
    Abstract

    There is considerable confusion in contemporary society when it comes to talking about race.Because of this confusion, race talk in schools can be fraught with difficulty, leading to problematic conversations, disconnections, and ultimately student disengagement. While studies in psychology, sociology, and linguistics have considered the role of race in discourse, there have been fewer of these investigations in English education, especially research on the teaching of literature. This article looks closely at the classroom talk of two veteran English teachers’ one an African American man, the other a White woman’ in a racially diverse high school, showing how teachers employ different strategies to navigate similarly fraught conversations. Taking an interactional ethnographic approach, I demonstrate ways that conversations about race that emerged from literature units in both classrooms opened up opportunities for some students to participate, while constraining and excluding others. The results of the study revealed that the two teachers navigated these dilemmas through tactical and strategic temporary alignments of actions and discourse, but in both classes, silence and evasion characterized moments of racial tension. As a growing number of researchers and teacher educators provide workshops and materials for teachers interested in classroom discourse studies, supporting new and experienced teachers’ investigations in this area may ultimately prove fruitful not only for teaching and learning, but also for race relations.

    doi:10.58680/rte201527600