Affirming plural belonging: Building on students' family-based cultural and linguistic capital through multiliteracies pedagogy

Author:

Taylor Lisa K.1,Bernhard Judith K.2,Garg Suchi3,Cummins Jim3

Affiliation:

1. Bishop's University, Canada,

2. Ryerson University, Canada

3. OISE/UT, Canada

Abstract

This article reports on a qualitative case study involving pedagogical innovations grounded in culturally and linguistically inclusive approaches to curriculum. In this project, kindergarten children were supported in collaboratively authoring Dual Language Identity Texts. Our findings suggest that as family and teacher conceptions of literacy were extended beyond traditional monolingual print-based literacy, home literacies associated with complex transnational and transgenerational communities of practice were legitimated through their inclusion within the school curriculum. This process invited family members to take up roles as expert partners in children's biliteracy development. Further, conditions were fostered for parents to consider and articulate their beliefs and values vis-à-vis their children's multiliterate practice and participation within these multiple, transnational communities.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Education

Reference69 articles.

1. Ada, A.F. (1988) `The Pajaro Valley Experience: Working with Spanish-speaking Parents to Develop Children's Reading and Writing Skills in the Home through the Use of Children's Literature', inT. Skutnabb-Kangas and J. Cummins (eds) Minority Education: From Shame to Struggle, pp. 223-38. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters.

2. Local Literacies

3. Barton, D., Hamilton, M. and Ivanic, R. (2000) `Introduction: Exploring Situated Literacies', in D. Barton, M. Hamilton and R. Ivanic (eds) Situated Literacies: Reading and Writing in Context, pp. 1-6. London : Routledge.

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