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Critical Literacy Guide

Critical literacy is a stance that encourages readers to question texts and consider power dynamics and missing perspectives. It involves challenging assumptions, exploring multiple viewpoints, and using literacy to promote social justice. Teachers can develop critical literacy in students through strategies like juxtaposing texts to highlight different perspectives, examining alternative endings, and modeling questioning of authors' stances. The goal is for students to see that texts are not neutral and to empower them to be active participants in reading and questioning what they consume.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
144 views

Critical Literacy Guide

Critical literacy is a stance that encourages readers to question texts and consider power dynamics and missing perspectives. It involves challenging assumptions, exploring multiple viewpoints, and using literacy to promote social justice. Teachers can develop critical literacy in students through strategies like juxtaposing texts to highlight different perspectives, examining alternative endings, and modeling questioning of authors' stances. The goal is for students to see that texts are not neutral and to empower them to be active participants in reading and questioning what they consume.

Uploaded by

rogtilio
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Literacy GAINS, 2009 1

Connecting Practice and Research: Critical Literacy Guide


Critical literacy ... points to providing students with the conceptual tools necessary to critique and
engage society along with its inequalities and injustices. Furthermore, critical literacy can stress
the need for students to develop a collective vision of what it might be like to live in the best of
all societies and how such a vision might be made practical.
(Kretovics, 1985, in Shor, 1999).
What Is Critical Literacy?
Critical Literacy is a stance, mental posture, or emotional and intellectual
attitude that readers, listeners, and viewers bring to bear as they interact with
texts. Gee (2004) calls it socially perceptive literacy. Luke (2004) asserts that
critical literacy involves second guessing, reading against the grain, asking hard
and harder questions, seeing underneath, behind, and beyond texts, trying to see
and call how these texts establish and use power over us, over others, on whose
behalf, in whose interests.
Critical literacy has been traced to the work of Paulo Freire, who taught adult
learners to read the word in order to read the world, and to engage in a cycle
of refection and action (Luke, 2004; McLaughlin & Devoogd, 2004; Shor, 1999). Additionally, John Dewey (Shor, 1999); Brian
Cambourne (McLaughlin & 21), pervasive new technologies (Luke, 2004), and various literary theorists have challenged
mainstream interpretations of texts and the notion that there is a singular or correct interpretation of any text.
Critical literacy goes beyond understanding literacy as a set of skills or practices.
From a review of the literature, Lewison, Flint, and Van Sluys (2002, in McLaughlin
& DeVoogd, 2004) identify the following principles of critical literacy:
challenging common assumptions and values
exploring multiple perspectives, and imagining those that are absent or
silenced
examining relationships, particularly those involving diferences in power
refecting on and using literacy practices to take action for social justice.
The text critic component of Luke and Freebodys (2002) Four Resources model, which focuses on critical competence,
suggests that students critically analyze and transform texts by acting on knowledge that texts are not ideologically natural
or neutral that they represent particular points of views while silencing others and infuence peoples ideas and that their
designs and discourses can be critiqued and redesigned in novel and hybrid ways. Cervetti, Damico and Pardeles (2001)
point out that critical literacy involves a fundamentally diferent view of the text in that critical literacy [foregrounds] issues
of power and attends explicitly to diferences across race, class, gender, sexual orientation and so on. It places students and
teachers in a questioning frame of mind that moves beyond didactic, factual learning to develop a critical consciousness
that can lead to a search for justice and equity. It requires but is not synonymous with critical thinking.
Why Teach Critical Literacy?
Comber (2001) argues that being critically literate is not only central, but also necessary to being literate in a media-
saturated, diverse world.
As such, critical literacy enhances and deepens comprehension, e.g., by requiring not only identifcation of persuasive
techniques, but also analysis of how and to what degree the text maintains the status quo or perpetuates inequities.
As David Pearson (2002) asserts, comprehension is never enough: it must have a critical edge. (in McLaughlin and
DeVoogd, 2004)
Critical literacy deepens understanding of ideas and information in all curricular areas, including language, environment,
politics, science, health, economics, and history. Critical literacy involves understanding that readings of texts are shaped by
the attitudes and values that readers bring to them, even as texts infuence and construct readers responses.
As Green (2001) states: The literate individual is someone who knows that there is more than one version available
Critical literacy involves imagining multiple perspectives and possibilities and using literacy as an agent of social change.
Key Message
Critical literacy is a stance, a mental posture,
or emotional and intellectual attitude.
Text traditionally referred to written
material. The meaning is broadening to
include, for example, media texts, oral text,
and graphic text. In this sense, text is not
synonymous with textbook.
Key Message
Critical Literacy views readers as active
participants in the reading process and
invites them to move beyond passively
accepting the texts message to question,
examine, or dispute the power relations that
exist between readers and authors. It focuses
on issues of power and promotes refection,
transformation, and action. (Freire, 1970)
Literacy GAINS, 2009 2
Connecting Practice and Research: Critical Literacy Guide
How Can Critical Literacy Be Taught?
As Jennifer OBrien (Luke, OBrien and Comber, 2001) and Vivian Vasquez (1996) demonstrate, critical literacy is not to be
reserved for older or academically profcient students, but can be taught even to primary students using all manner of texts.
Strategies that can be used to develop a critically literate stance include the
following:
juxtaposing texts on a similar topic to highlight the range of possible
perspectives, e.g., editorials from opposing points of view
testing texts against predictions to expose the assumptions informing
those predictions, e.g., predicting a fairy tale ending for The Paperbag
Princess
examining or creating alternative endings in order to highlight their
implicit values and societal expectations, e.g., comparing the two endings
of Great Expectations
using examples of texts from everyday life, such as toy advertisements
and legal contracts to show that these are not innocuous, neutral text(s)
requiring simple decoding and response. They are key moments where
social identity and power relations are established and negotiated.
(Luke, OBrien and Comber, 2001)
Posing and teaching students to pose questions that problematize text
and evoke thinking about issues of language, text, and power; providing
students with sample critical questions, for example:
How is your understanding of the text infuenced by your background?
How is the text infuencing you, e.g., does the form of the text infuence how you construct meaning?
How does the language in a text position you as reader, e.g., does the use of passive or active voice position you in a
particular way?
What view of the world and what values does the text present?
What assumptions about your values and beliefs does the text make?
What perspectives are omitted?
Whose interests are served by the text?
Who gets to ask questions, who gets to answer, and the kinds of questions asked are key. Gee (1989, in Green, 2001) argues
that literacy is empowering only when it renders [people] active questioners of the social reality around them. Strategies
include:
helping students understand that they can act with and/or against the text, e.g., by inquiring further into issues raised
or by having students consider how the account might change if told from anothers perspective. McLaughlin and
DeVoogd (2004) describe this as developing students power to envision alternate ways of viewing the authors topic.
modeling a think-aloud that questions what the author is saying, disagrees, or speculates about the need for more
information about what is read
providing opportunities for students to refect, draw on their own world view, and explore the implications of ideas for
themselves and others.
Edelsky (1993) says that teachers can foster critical literacy by problematizing texts putting them up for grabs, for critical
debate, for weighing, judging, critiquing and looking at issues in their full complexity. Green (2001) argues that the
relationship between student and text shifts when teachers [reposition] students as researchers of language, and respect
minority cultures literacy practices. In general, teachers develop classroom climates and norms that help students learn
how to:
identify and assess their own response and relationship to the text
analyze how texts have been constructed and how they infuence audiences
evaluate the validity and reliability of the text and its ostensible premises
consider the social implications of the above, and take a moral stand on the kind of just society and democratic
education we want. (Shor, 1999).
Key Message
every day that we teach we in fact make
choices; we make decisions about which
texts, which messages, which values, and
which attitudes we represent towards the
truths of texts and discourses.
There is no magic method for literacy.
There is no single or simple or unifed
approach to critical literacy.And that
may be what sets approaches to critical
literacy apartthey dont purport to
provide a universal, incontestable, scientifc
answer about how to teach. Instead, they
very deliberately open up a universe of
possibilities, of possible critical readings,
critical reading positions and practices.
(Luke, 2004)
Literacy GAINS, 2009 3
Connecting Practice and Research: Critical Literacy Guide
Teachers can create conditions for fostering the kind of inquiry and discussion
necessary for critical literacy for example:
building a safe, inclusive classroom environment that promotes inquiry
making available thought-provoking oral, print, electronic, and multi-media
texts representing diverse perspectives
developing understanding of students interests, backgrounds and values,
and honouring the strengths and literacies they bring to school
providing a wide range of texts for students to read/view/hear, including
texts from popular culture and non-traditional classroom texts
acknowledging that some issues and discussions can be sensitive and
uncomfortable for some students.
Approaches supporting efective literacy instruction are also helpful:
encouraging students to access and connect to prior experience and knowledge, and recognizing how students beliefs
and values infuence their understanding
modeling and explicitly teaching wait time during discussions
modeling and explicitly teaching respectful interactions and response norms
encouraging all students to participate in discussions to avoid the dominance of a few
modeling and providing students with opportunities to refect on their thinking and inherent assumptions
exploring alternative readings.
Implications for Teachers
Greene (2001) reminds us that teachers need a conscious awareness of their own understanding of language and language
choices if they are to help students question and understand how language works and how literacy is used by individuals
and groups for particular purposes, e.g., how the use of third person voice establishes authority and power.
Key Message
When teachers and students are engaged
in critical literacy, they ask complicated
questions about language and power, about
people and lifestyle, about morality and
ethics, and about who is advantaged by the
way things are and who is disadvantaged.
(Comber, 2001)
Literacy GAINS, 2009 4
Connecting Practice and Research: Critical Literacy Guide
Professional Print Resources
Burke, J. (2001). Illuminating texts: How to teach students to read the world. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann.
Comber, Barbara (2001). Negotiating critical literacies. in Ideas for the Classroom. April 2001, 6, 3. National Council of Teachers of English.
Edelsky, C. (1995). Education for democracy. Address to the U.S. National Council of Teachers of English Annual Conference, Pittsburgh, PA. 1993.
Freebody, P., and Luke, A. (2002). Literate Futures: Reading. State of Queensland: Department of Education.
Koechlin, C. and Zwann, S. (2006) Q-Tasks: How to empower students to ask questions and care about answers. Markham, Ontario: Pembroke
Publishers.
Luke, Allan (2004). Foreward. in McLaughlin, M. and Devoogd, G. (2004). Critical Literacy: Enhancing students comprehension of text. New York,
Scholastic.
McLaughlin, M., Devoogd, G. (2004) Critical literacy: Enhancing students comprehension of text. New York, Scholastic.
Ontario Ministry of Education (2004). Literacy for learning: The report of the expert panel on literacy in Grades 4 to 6 in Ontario. Toronto, Ontario:
Queens Printer for Ontario.
Vasquez, V. (2000) Building community through social action. in School Talk. 5, 4. Urbana, Illinois: National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE).
Scholarly Sources
Adler, M., Rougle, E. (2005). Building literacy through classroom discussion: Research-based strategies for developing critical readers and
thoughtful writers in middle school. New York: Scholastic.
Alvermann, Donna (2002). Efective Literacy Instruction for Adolescents. Journal of Literacy Research, 34, 2. pp. 189-208.
Cervetti, G., Damico, J. S. and Pardeles, M.J. (2001). A tale of diferences: Comparing the traditions, perspectives and educational goals of
critical reading and critical literacy. Reading Online. Available http://www.reading.org
Comber, Barbara (2001). Classroom explorations in critical literacy. in Fehring, H. and Green, P., Eds. (2001). Critical literacy: A collection of
articles from the Australian Literacy Educators Association. Newark, Delaware: International Reading Association. pp. 90-111.
Freire, P. (1985). The politics of education: Culture, power, and liberation. New York: Bergin and Garvey.
Freire, P. & Macedo, D. (1987). Literacy: Reading the Word and the World. Boulder, CO: Paradigm. Publishers.
Gee, J.P. (2001). Critical Literacy/Socially Perceptive Literacy: A Study of Language in Action. in Fehring, H. and Green, P., Eds. (2001).
Critical literacy: A collection of articles from the Australian Literacy Educators Association. Newark, Delaware: International Reading
Association. pp. 15-39.
Gee, J. P. (2006). Situated language and learning. 2
nd
Ed. New York: Routledge.
Giroux, Henry A. (2001). Theory and resistance in education: Towards a pedagogy for the opposition. Westport, Connecticut:
Bergin & Garvey.
Green, Pam (2001). Critical literacy revisited. in Fehring, H. and Green, P., Eds. (2001). Critical literacy: A collection of articles from the
Australian Literacy Educators Association. Newark, Delaware: International Reading Association. pp. 7-13,
Kempe, Ann (2001). Empowering students to construct socially critical readings. in Fehring, H. and Green, P., Eds. (2001). Critical literacy: A
collection of articles from the Australian Literacy Educators Association. Newark, Delaware: International Reading Association. pp. 40-57.
Luke, Allan; OBrien, Jennifer; and Comber, Barbara (2001). Making community texts objects of study. in Fehring, H. and Green, P., Eds.
(2001). Critical literacy: A collection of articles from the Australian Literacy Educators Association. Newark, Delaware: International Reading
Association. pp. 112-123.
Moll, L. C., & Greenberg, J. B. (1990). Creating zones of possibilities: Combining social contexts for instruction. in Moll, L.C., Ed. (1990).
Vygotsky and education: Instructional implications and applications of sociohistorical psychology. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Shor, Ira (1999). What is critical literacy? Journal of Pedagogy, Pluralism & Practice. 4, 1. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Lesley College.
Available: http://www.lesley.edu/journals/jppp/4/index.html
Vasquez, Vivian (1996). Using Everyday Issues and Everyday Texts to Negotiate Critical Literacies with Young Children. American
University, Washington, DC Hawaii Paper. Available: http://www.hiceducation.org/Edu_Proceedings/Vivian%20Vasquez2.pdf

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