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Reading Matters

You Matter

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84

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Reading Matters | Volume 16 • Winter 2016 |

scira.org CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO TABLE OF CONTENTS

social action around social justice issues as evidenced by Cowhey

in the above discussion of her routine classroom practices.

Table 1. Taking Authentic Action: Going Beyond a Pedestrian Approach

• Framing issue along a dynamic continuum

• Investigating root causes and circumstances

• Inviting activists or community members into the school to discuss current

needs and action taking place around identified needs

• Becoming familiar with community sites by interviewing individuals

connected with community spaces (i.e. food banks, shelters, etc.)

• Co-constructing (with community members) inquiry-based action projects

with the aim of challenging stereotypes and removing stigma

• Anticipating possible consequences of action

• Engaging in reflection on what occurs and accepting responsibility for the

consequences (or lack thereof)

• Consider strategies for sustaining or revising action taken

Adapted from Cowhey (2006); Short (2011); Silvers & Shorey (2012);Winograd (2015)

Implications for Practice: Thinking

Toward the Future

It is important for students to understand more than the area

they live in; that there is a much bigger world awaiting them

that they should take the time to understand. Living in the

technologically immersed society that we live in today means that

as teachers we need to prepare our students to be global citizens

able to function and thrive in their future lives. The pedagogical

challenge we described provoked both of us to revisit critical

literacy and children’s literature scholarship as a way of preparing

ourselves to move beyond read-alouds with picture books centered

around social justice issues. In addition to revisiting children’s

literature scholarship in this focus area, the pedagogical challenge

provoked both of us to consider implications for our future

practices. In the next section, we provide recommendations for

practice in early childhood classrooms and university classrooms.

Jill: An Early Childhood Classroom

Teacher’s Perspective

After reflecting on the pedagogical challenge and revisiting

the scholarship, I (Jill) uncovered several strategies for moving

beyond a pedestrian approach to picture book read-alouds,

specifically those highlighting social justice centered issues.

Here I offer some ideas for teachers to consider implementing,

using children’s literature in early childhood classrooms.

Given the goal of engaging students in taking meaningful

action around social justice issues, I recommend the following

strategies. First, begin by reading several similarly themed

social justice picture books aloud to the students without

showing the illustrations. The intention behind this is to

allow the students to construct their own illustrations of the

story, share their own personal experiences, and provide you

with a window into their thinking on the social justice issue

being highlighted in the literature (Botelho & Rudman, 2009).

After having read the books, ask students to create their own

illustrations for each book. Following a “picture walk” sharing

session of student-created picture book illustrations, the

class can discuss each book using a critical lens and asking a

series of important questions. In Table 2, Silvers and Shorey

(2012) provide excellent questions to consider (p.15).

Table 2. Critical questions

• Whose voices are heard? Whose voices are absent?

• What does the author/illustrator want the reader to think/understand?

• What is an alternative to the author/illustrator’s message?

• How will a critical reading of this text help me change my views or actions

in relation to other people?

How does this text confirm or challenge a personal experience

you have had related to this issue? As Winogard (2015) reminds

us “when the teacher asks just the right questions to get students

to consider multiple perspectives, the bias of the author, and the

larger political context of the events, this moves the discussion

and analysis into the realm of the ‘critical’. The quality of the

teacher’s questions are crucial when doing critical literacy, as it

is in all teaching” (p. 109). After a “deep” discussion of the texts,

I recommend creating a continuum of where the texts fall in

relation to one another--similar to Short’s (2011) activity around

poverty with children in a primary level classroom. Depending

on the reading level of the students, a classroom teacher can add

other texts as well to deepen the discussion and broaden the

continuum (see Short et al, 2013). You can also invite the students

to create either a play or poem depicting the social justice issue

in an effort to access multiple modalities in the interpretive

process. For more in-depth suggestions for developing a critical

literacy curriculum with young children see Winograd, (2015).

To enrich the discussion and provide the students with an

understanding as to why social justice issues occur, it is important

to provide students with nonfiction books or other sources

to aid their understanding. Through discussion, creation, and

reflection of multiple texts and resources (print, digital, artistic)

facilitated by teachers, early childhood students can brainstorm

actions that could be taken by the class to create some level of

local change. Such activities would help students to understand

the root causes and circumstances behind social justice issues

and give them opportunities to create meaningful change—in

their own way—through authentic learning experiences that

reflect multiliteracies (Silvers & Shorey, 2012) and literacy as a

social practice (Vazquez, Egaway, Harste, & Thompson, 2004).

Sandra: A Literacy Teacher

Educator’s Perspective

The pedagogical challenge of going beyond a pedestrian

approach provoked me (Sandra), as a teacher educator, to

make changes in how I approach courses addressing content

and pedagogy in literacy development. I asked myself: How

do I model and facilitate authentic university-level classroom

activities that go beyond a pedestrian approach to social

justice-themed children’s literature? How do I integrate theory

and practice about social justice children’s literature more

strategically and explicitly? For me, the answers to these

questions are still in process. However, in what follows I share

four recommendations for literacy teacher educators.