Annotations Blog 5
Annotations Blog 5
To cite this article: Jeffrey M. R. Duncan-Andrade (2004): Your Best Friend or Your
Worst Enemy: Youth Popular Culture, Pedagogy, and Curriculum in Urban Classrooms,
Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies, 26:4, 313-337
To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10714410490905366
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Teachers are often the group of outsiders most familiar with youth
popular culture, from style to media to language practices. This
rich database of information is, at best, untapped by schools. At
worst, schools reject and debase youth culture as academically
irrelevant and socially reprehensible. This adversarial position,
often taken by teachers, contributes to many students perceptions
that school is at odds with their personal and cultural interests.
Regardless of teachers and school officials good intentions, the
choice to make youth culture one of the central battlegrounds over
cultural sensibilities creates needless and destructive cultural distances instead of opening access to knowledge and supporting,
trusting relationships.
To understand the potential of youth culture as a pedagogical
scaffold, it is important to explore two dimensions of it: 1) youth
culture as an avenue that can provide teachers with access to
knowledge of and relationships with their students; and 2) youth
culture as an avenue that can provide youth with access to the
broader societys valued knowledge. A final caveat that is important to include in all discussions of teachers accessing youth
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more than immediately enjoyable since they promote having desirable future
experiences. (27)
This sort of empowering pedagogy, focused on developing students capacities as agents of critical awareness and social change,
must consist of a critical youth cultural literacy; one that deconstructs the formation of cultural sensibilities resultant from the
power of postmodern literacies such as film and television
(McLaren & Hammer, 1996).
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J. M. R. Duncan-Andrade
Sadly, my experience is that teachers who do use popular culture often do so in ways that unwittingly reinforce the already
present cultural hierarchy. They do this by using the popular
cultural texts (usually movies, music, or sport) as a reward, given
out to students after the important work in the class has been
done. In the English classroom, this most commonly manifests
itself in the form of a movie at the end of a curriculum unit. This
usually translates into one or two days of fun time where kids
dont have to learn and teachers dont have to teach. The film is
never treated as a text to be studied, and whats worse is that this
leads to a tacit agreement between student and teacher that youth
popular culture is simply a schools tool of pacification unworthy
of intellectual interrogation. Young people are never taught to see
their engagement with media as a form of literacy development,
nor are they taught how to enhance and refine that development.
For some time I have found this misuse of youth culture to be
troubling and culturally imperialistic on the part of our educational system. It presumes that for the vast majority of students
free timeupwards of 60 hours per weekstudents are intellectually unengaged. While this may be true in some senses, I would
argue that schools have some culpability in this disengagement
with media. Rather than providing young people with the tools
for a critical media literacy, we have villainized their culture of
media literacy and unwittingly set off a war between the legitimate
knowledge of schools and the nefarious knowledge of youth culture. This is a silly war for educators to fight for a number of reasons: 1) It wrongly presumes the higher cultural and intellectual
order of printed texts, an argument for which we have no evidence
other than our own imperialistic cultural sensibilities; 2) It
wrongly presumes that we could not teach the same higher-order
thinking skills across academic content areas, using a rich combination of media texts4 and printed texts; 3) It wrongly presumes
that to turn to a pedagogy and curriculum that emphasizes the
use of youth popular cultural texts will insure that children will
never learn to love reading printed texts and therefore be denied
important literacy skills and the richness of the literary canon;
4) It wrongly presumes that education is not supposed to be fun
for young people but is, instead, a right of passage into adulthood
where their childlike sensibilities are removed and replaced with
the more upstanding sensibilities of adults; and 5) It wrongly presumes that popular cultural texts are more engaging for young
people because they are simplistic and nurture a more visceral
interaction.
The Nielsen studies (1998, 2000) make it clear that our children are reading texts and that they are doing it with the voracity
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Yancey:
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Andrade:
Shaun:
Andrade:
Shaun:
Andrade:
Shaun:
Andrade:
Shaun:
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I grap a fat book and read it if its interesting. Its like the
book I got at the house reading now, is . . . about Death
Row. Its about how corrupt Suge Knight was and how
he did all this, and I know hecka stuff that I didnt never
know about Suge Knight and all that stuff. And that
book is about, like, about three hundred, fo hundred
pages. Im only on like a hundred pages now. And Im
still goin to certain chapters and readin it all over just
cause Im interested in that kinda stuff.
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Worth noting is that both Shaun and Yancey reference printed texts
in their discussion about the value of popular cultural texts. They
are not arguing for the banishment of printed texts. They are
arguing for a more culturally relevant curriculum, one that
encourages them to bring to bear the youth cultural knowledge
that they possess.
Perhaps the recent test score scare tactics that encourage
educators to believe we are dealing with a growing population of
illiterate children are wide of the mark. Perhaps the student resistance to printed texts that we are seeing in schools is a conscious
response by students to what Valenzuela has called aesthetic
caring (Valenzuela, 1999). Kohl has characterized this as a
students decision to not learn (Kohl, 1994). This way of looking
at student performance in schools drastically changes our notions
of what is actually causing trends of failure. It encourages
educators to do away with deficit notions of diminished intellectual
capacity on the part of the student by considering acts of resistance
to the curriculum as a form of student agency; that not learning is
a statement on the part of students to say that they will not be
subjected to a curriculum and pedagogy that is dismissive of them
and their cultural knowledge.
Both Yancey and Shaun suggest that educators need to rethink
their position on official knowledge (Apple, 1993):
Yancey:
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Yancey:
Shaun:
Yancey:
Shaun:
. . . yeah, basically. It shouldnt even be looked upon differently. I dont know. I think that maybe our, uh, the
way the school system is set up theyre maybe intimidated by bringing such a thing out. That the students
that might actually want to learn this and be able to
get something out of it to use in each day of our lives
now, to be able to push, strive to excellence through that
literature. I think they see it as being, I think they see it
as kids will probably understand that better so why
dont we make it difficult for them. And if they can make
it through this difficult process then they can make it
through another difficult process. And, I mean, I disagree with that.
Uh huh. Yup.
I think that just because it perceives to be music and it
looks easy to understand. You can take music to a whole
different level. I mean, its on you, on how you teach it,
how you take upon it, how dig you deep, I mean, how
far down you dig into the music. If you listen to just,
you know, the beat and you just let it go through your
ears and youre just dancing to it, thats another story.
But, if youre sitting there and youre actually writing
what he says down and, or she says down, and you look
at it and you study it, you can get a lot out of that.
Fo sho!
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In my experience, these three students comments reflect the sentiments of many urban students in their desire for a more intellectually rigorous literacy curriculum that employs youth popular
culture as a bridge to traditional literacy skills. To be sure, young
people want the opportunity to represent their own cultural knowledge, but they are also clamoring for pedagogies that employ this
knowledge as a scaffold into skills that allow for more complex literary analyses. To some degree, this request is quite the opposite of
current curriculum and pedagogy trends in urban public schools.
BACK(WARDS) TO BASICS
Steven Goodman, a renowned educator of urban youth in New
York City, critiques conservative cultural and literacy theorists
for their unwillingness to recognize the cultural and linguistic
assets urban youth develop in their homes and communities. He
highlights the work of E. D. Hirsch, Jr. (2001) as a prime example
of the increasingly powerful conservative voice in urban school
literacy programs; a voice that is calling for a return to drill-andpractice exercises that frequently cause low income urban
students to become even more detached and disengaged from
school because it widens the disconnect between what students
are exposed to out of school and what they are force-fed in school
(Goodman, 2003).
Rather than approaching the problem from Hirshs deficit
model which calls for educators to see poor students, particularly
students of color, as culturally deficient, more progressive literacy
theorists see the problem with the school-based literacy gap as
resting largely on the shoulders of the school (Finn, 1999; Gee,
2004; Lee, 1993; Mahiri, 1998; Morrell & Duncan-Andrade,
2003). These perspectives on literacy recognize that there are
many forms of cultural literacy and that schools have traditionally
provided only one such form. The debate for progressives is not
over whether school-based literacy is important, but over how
schools can better use the richness of community-based literacies
as scaffolds into school-based literacies.
RETHINKING CULTURAL RELEVANCE IN CLASSROOM
LITERACY
The 1980s gave rise to a multicultural education movement that
called cultural awareness to the front of educational debate. The
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positive impact that emerged out of this discourse cannot be overstated. It has made teachers around the nation more sensitive to
the needs of students of color, particularly in the selection of curriculum. James Banks, often at the center of this dialogue, insists
on the need for a multicultural pedagogy and curriculum:
Teachers should also select content from diverse ethnic groups so that students from various cultures will see their images in the curriculum. Educational equity will exist for all students when teachers become sensitive to
the cultural diversity in their classrooms, vary their teaching styles so as to
appeal to a diverse student population, and modify their curricula to include
ethnic content. (Banks, 1994). Sadly, twenty years after Banks originally
published this call for more ethnic content in the curriculum, many educators continue to employ culture as a proxy for race. So, while the curriculum
has become more multiethnic, the pedagogical method of delivering this content remains virtually unchanged.
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Shaun:
Shaun:
Yancey:
Yancey:
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For both Shaun and Yancey, the use of popular film5 and music
as legitimate academic texts provided a variety of opportunities
to develop skills of analysis and discussion. More importantly
though, it has added to their media literacy tool kit, challenging
them to change the way they interact with the media in their
lives.
New literacy theorists (Duncan-Andrade & Morrell, in press;
Gee, 2004; Gutierrez, 1995; Gutierrez & Stone, 2002; Kress,
2003; Lee, 1993; Morrell, 2004; Morrell & Duncan-Andrade,
2003) have crafted broader definitions of literacy activities that
would support a pedagogical approach that challenges traditionalist notions of literacy being tied exclusively to print. A curriculum that draws from youth culture would embrace these
expanding definitions of literacy by viewing students as producers of and participants in various cultural literacies, such as:
image, style, and discursive practices. This more inclusive
approach to literacy instruction recognizes students as cultural
producers with their own spheres of emerging literacy participation. This pedagogy of articulation and risk (Grossberg,
1994) values and learns from the cultural literacies students
bring to the classroom and assists them as they expand those literacies and develop new ones. Teachers should aim to develop
young peoples critical literacy, but they should also recognize
students as producers of literacy and support that production.
For Freire, this is the ultimate form of critical pedagogy; that
is, engaging young people in critical dialogues over various literacies, providing space for production of these literacies, and then
valuing those products enough to engage in critical dialogue over
them. If, indeed, urban schools hope to advance the spirit of
critical pedagogy and the multicultural education movement,
then they would do well to listen to young people and make
better use of youth cultural literacies in their pedagogy and
curriculum.
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NOTES
1. The issue of student disengagement is well documented (Finn, 1999; Kohl, 1994;
MacLeod, 1987). This paper is not an attempt to duplicate that work, but,
instead, aims to discuss promising solutions to the problem.
2. Valenzuela highlights the difference in the U. S. use of the term education, which
often means schooling for Mexican children, and the Mexican term educaci
on
which elicits the expectation of a more holistic, authentically caring relationship.
335
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Annotations
Mendeley User
Page no. 6
27/10/2015 21:58
In order to get students engaged, teachers need to make the content relevant to their students. If the
students are interested in music, find a way to bring music into the classroom. Value their interests and
ideas, and they will (hopefully) value their time in your class.
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Mendeley User
Page no. 7
27/10/2015 22:01
Using the diversity in the classroom can create a safe and secure learning environment for students.
Incorporating student's backgrounds with lessons and activites can make students feel more
comfortable and make them want to participate.
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Mendeley User
Page no. 12
27/10/2015 22:09
There is never a reason that an entire movie should be shown in a classroom. It's interesting to see
how Duncan-Andrade brought up the English class and that movies are shown at the end of a unit. My
senior year in high school, my English teacher showed us 2 different versions of Romeo and Juliet.
Obviously, I didnt mind this because I was able to just watch the movies, but now I look back and
realize that I did not take anything away from watching those movies. It was just something to fill up the
time. Comparing an act in a play with a scene in a movie is one thing, but just watching the entire
movie is pointless.
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Mendeley User
Page no. 15
27/10/2015 22:18
Technology is a great resource for students to use inside and outside of the classroom. However, I
think the issue with technology is that people (not every person though) are becoming lazy and
unsociable. Students and adults can not function without a phone, computer, or tablet in front of them.
Everything is at the touch of your fingertips and I think some people tend to forget that interacting with
humans face-to-face is a crucial skill that we need to have.
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Mendeley User
Page no. 17
27/10/2015 22:23
Students need to be assed on their learning and their skills. When students are not interested in the
content, they are not going to pay attention. In the long run it could hurt their test scores. If the
curriculum is not helping students, it needs to be adjusted (wishful thinking?).
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Mendeley User
Page no. 20
27/10/2015 22:33
The word "rap," for the most part, has a negative connotation. Violence, drugs, and sex is what pops
into my mind and to bring that into my classroom is something that I would not necessarily feel
comfortable doing. On the other hand, not every rap song is about drug, sex, or violence. Those songs
are the ones that we need to incorporate into our curriculum.
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Mendeley User
Page no. 24
27/10/2015 22:41
Knowing students can help teachers find ways to connect with them. Interviewing students about their
thoughts will make them feel like their opinions are valued while providing the teacher with valuable
information that can be used inside the classroom.