For Teachers
Uncovering Academic Literacies
The definition for literacy I accepted was based on all the research I struggled through.
It is: competency in different contexts. This definition allowed me to understand the concepts of multiple literacies. But such a broad understanding of the complicated ideas seems like a cop out to some other teachers I’ve talked with.
“Well, then aren’t you saying everything is ‘a literacy?’” they ask.
And I have to answer, “Yes, I am.”
If successful communication is all about competencies and if we all strive for successful communication, then yes, everything is its own literacy.
Here’s one of the ways I can tell:
I’m teaching an Adolescent Literacy course at Hunter this semester, and on the first day, class members brainstormed answers to three big questions:
- Why do teens have their “own” literacies?
- How do we teach and learn literacies?
- What literacies are important to have?
Partly because my class is made up of adults, half of whom are teaching as a second career, answers were rich and varied. Teens have their own literacies, for example, because their immigration experience is different than that of an adult. We teach and learn literacies, for example, by being exposed to, and then adapting to, new contexts. This adaptation is a literacy. And in terms of what literacies are important to have, students came up with ones such as “hospital advocacy.”
Once my definition was “proven,”—once students arrived at the idea that literacy is the ability to communicate and advocate, I then had to work out just what literacies we were going to cover in class. It was only through this process of drilling down into my definitions and understandings that I arrived at the topic of Academic Literacy. It’s not a new idea, I didn’t invent it, but because I arrived at it through inquiry, it feels new and personal.
Academic Literacy is students’ ability to show communicative competence in school. Specifically school. (And we could go deeper than that. Math Literacy + Science Literacy+ Metacognitive Literacy= Academic Literacies) This definition gives credence to, and honors, all the other literacies in teens’ lives: gaming literacy, texting literacy, computer literacy, sports literacy. It also honors that Academic literacy may be in conflict with these others. It is separate from how teens speak, think, act, and talk outside of school.
The writings of Academic Literacies are different. Modes, or registers, of speech and forms of questioning are different. A student may only “speak,” or “practice” academic literacy during school hours. This is why some students are more literate than others, why some meet with more success in school, why some communicate better with teachers, why some feel that this academic literacy is a literacy of authority. Because the rules are different. Academic Literacy has rules like anything else—languages and games, for example. The ability to communicate competently in school does mean that students need to follow rules, and does mean they need to learn how to play the “game” of school. If nothing else, Academic Literacy is its own language students have to learn.
Read E-Books with SimplyE
With your library card, it's easier than ever to choose from more than 300,000 e-books on SimplyE, The New York Public Library's free e-reader app. Gain access to digital resources for all ages, including e-books, audiobooks, databases, and more.
If you don’t have an NYPL library card, New York State residents can apply for a digital card online or through SimplyE (available on the App Store or Google Play).
Need more help? Read our guide to using SimplyE.
Comments
Academic Literacy
Submitted by Laura (not verified) on September 30, 2010 - 12:43pm
Thanks, Laura, for your
Submitted by Janna Robin (not verified) on September 30, 2010 - 1:43pm
Academic & Other Literacies
Submitted by Hyacinth Persad (not verified) on October 2, 2010 - 5:32pm
literacy
Submitted by Wendy S. (not verified) on October 20, 2010 - 8:42pm