Reading together

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Instructions for joining on the Assignments page.

 

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Time photoOur course invites you to work with data collection and analysis, readings, and discussion around the field of literacy studies

Grant- SO EXCITED ABOUT LITERACY!

Grant- SO EXCITED ABOUT LITERACY!

My name is Bridget Grant, I’m a 3rd year student here at Chico State. I’m studying English, to become a teacher. I take Spanish classes because I want to learn Spanish, and if I end up having enough units for a minor I would be stoked! I love to travel and be outdoors. My image is of my adorable puppy sleeping on my feet while I write this.  I love where I go to school, more and more each semester I am here. I love reading and writing and I can tell this class is going to begin to shape my teaching philosophies and my understanding of the way students learn.

Literacy is a very curious concept to me. Szwed’s writing regarding communal and individual literacy suggests the idea that the two are interconnected. I believe in the concept that literacy is complex, ever-changing, and growing. As a prospective teacher I am starting to understand the importance of having diverse mediums, modern technology and relevant lessons to present to my students.

Having a narrow definition of literacy, which I experienced during early years of elementary school, can limit creativity. Szwed mentions code-switching and dialects in his writing. These two aspects of literacy are fascinating to me. Szwed uses Black dialects as an example of a different type of literacy in writing that should be valued instead of criticized because its unconventional and different. For example, since I’m from the Bay I hella relate to this and I’m juiced to think of literacy among different demographics. Another interesting concept he mentions is code-switching. Code-switching is something I would love to study and learn more about. As a second language learner I find it impressive that people are able to blend a sentence of two different languages together to fit grammatically and make sense to an audience.

Another thing I’m looking forward to exploring is the idea of decontextualized literacy that is taught in schools. I would love to be a teacher that one day, my students feel like they learned something useful in my class! Also when I think of technology, I’m immediately able to think of the broad concept of literacy in a more simplified way. Understanding how to text on a cellphone and to decipher abbreviations comes so naturally to most of us, however to my Grandma Betty, the iPhone is impossible! My whole family applauded when she figured out how to use Facetime after about 3 years of owning this same phone. However, my three baby cousins could send me a call, text, email, challenge me to Fun Run and take a silly video within a minute! Hopefully by the end of this semester I will be able to understand how that happens more clearly.

One Reply to “Grant- SO EXCITED ABOUT LITERACY!”

  1. I am so on your side. I can’t wait to be able to teach my own classes and have them learn as much from me as I learn from them. it’s so interesting with the technology gap and how literate each generation is because as technology advances even more there is the possibility that we as teachers one day will be just like our teacher who can barely use power point. Literacy in that way is very funny to me because everything is constantly changing.

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