Reading together

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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

Author: kschroer

Give Me Literacy or Give Me Death

Give Me Literacy or Give Me Death

That title is dramatic and doesn’t really have anything to do with my blog, but I thought it sounded pretty catchy. Actually, I guess I could generate my post around this title, because literacy has become so prevalent and wide-spread that if you ARE illiterate you can’t really progress very far in our culture. The case study of Genna May and her great-grandson prove this to be true. When Genna was growing up all she needed was twelve weeks of grammar education. She lived in a rural area on a farm and did not need to know how to read or write in order to milk cows. Her great grandson was a different story. He was learning to read and write as a precursor for kindergarten and was part of a special education program. Brandt argues that the requirements of literacy has dramatically changed. In Genna’s day-and-age it used to belong to the “elite”. Social status usually determined your level of education. By the time her great grandson was born those requirements changed to “the challenges faced by all literacy learners in a society whose rapid changes are tied up with literacy and its enterprises” (pg. 3).

So why does this matter to us as future teachers? Because according to Brandt those challenges will continue to change and it is our job as teachers to change with them. In the case study of Genna and Michael, Brandt argues that the educational expectations have changed (in this case it was societal as the the economy shifted from agricultural to suburb/urban), which complicates the argument that now we are expected to read and write at a level that “used to belong only to an elite” (page 3). Oh how simple it used to be! Our children are expected to read and write, they are expected to know how to use social media and keep up with the every changing, fast-paced literary world of our society. Before it was an option, now it is a necessity. I know I am repeating myself, but heck, I’ll say it again: What defines being literate has changed. It no longer means “reading and writing”, but has diversified, which complicates literacy.Today, literacy means “a person’s capacity to amalgamate (merge/unite) new reading and writing practices in response to rapid social change” (pg. 4). This is huge. Our children, we have learned, already know when to switch their level of language depending on who they are corresponding with. They know who to tweet, blog, online chat and surf the every vast web for information. They know how to process this information and regurgitate it. In short, our children have turned into little computers and we expect them to function like little computers.

Brandt states that literacy “piles up” and “spreads out”. Piling up means formal education among families has risen as more and more parents have gone to college and expect the same standards for their children. In short, there is a rise in literacy expectations. This complicates matters because the old methods of literacy still exist, along with the new methods, which means kids have to known two forms of literacy: old and new. That will be a focus for me as a teacher: teaching the old methods of literacy and the new methods.

Society is every-changing, even from when my parents were in school to current. That’s only 30 years! My parents never went to college. My father, much like Genna, was raised on a farm and all he was expected to know was how to milk cows and fix farm equipment. His mother, my grandmother, was EXACTLY like Genna in the fact that she received her education until she was in 8th grade and then worked on her family’s farm, got married, had kids, and then worked on her husband’s farm. My mother wanted to go to college to be a nurse, but her parents never pushed the issue and encouraged her to get a job at 16 at a bank, which is what she did. She married my father, had three kids, and helped my father on our farm. My siblings and I were never discouraged from going to college, but it was understood that we didn’t have to if we didn’t want to. The only important thing to my parents was to get a job where we could financially support ourselves, and that job could come from a higher education, or a vocational job. My brother and I went to college. My sister chose a vocational job; both of them are acceptable to my parents. The point is, now that I look at our every-changing society if I have kids they will be expected to go to college. It’s not an option anymore. Even the most mundane jobs require you to have at least a high school degree, if not a college degree.

This expectation puts a huge amount of pressure on me as a future teacher. Not only will I be responsible for thousands of kids’ education, but I will be expected to continuously educate myself on the rapid changes in literacy. If I don’t, then I imagine I will fall to the way-side.

The “spreading out” of literacy, Brandt says, comes from increased powers according to print that have made reading and writing a necessity of every-day life. An example that Brandt gives is growing food has changed to manufacturing foods, which has developed into managing information about manufacturing food. Our ability to earn a living is tied up closely with our ability to read. Brandt states we live in a “document reality” with “raw data passed through socially organized systems of recording and reporting”.

So how do we as teachers solve this huge dilemma of increased literacy expectations piling up and spreading out? According to Brandt we do this by teaching the history of literacy in schools so people can see a connection between past, present, and future literacy development in a society that is rapidly changing its literacy standards. The problem isn’t in the lack of literacy in society, but a surplus of it (pg.19). “Being literate in the 20th century has to do with being able to negotiate that burgeoning surplus” (pg19). That is how, we as future English teachers, solve this huge dilemma.

 

Literary as Social

Literary as Social

I never thought about literacy being “social”. Until recently, I have always connected being literate to being good at English. And when I say “being good at English”, I mean being good at reading and writing. I grew up in a town where a good percentage of my school did not know how to read English or even speak it very well, so to be literate there was to be good at those two basic functions of every-day life. Kind of sad, but true. When I read Deborah Brandt’s “Sponsors of Literacy”, I realized that being literate goes beyond being good at reading and writing. It’s much more complicated than that, and it’s also more social than that. I had an individualistic view of literacy by narrowing it down to reading books in class and writing a good essay. All of my notions of literacy were connected to scholastic fetes. I never thought about the every-day use of literacy or the sponsors that have helped me develop difference categories of literacy. When I started thinking of them I had a huge list. There are my social sponsors, such as teachers, parents, educational programs on television, Facebook, Instagram, my Iphone that can do pretty much anything, texting (which I boycotted for a very long time before I realized I like writing messages as opposed to talking on the phone) and, of course, college. Then I thought beyond those and realized I have a different kind of literacy- work. Since 18 years old I have worked in a doctor’s office and was responsible for writing medical reports and billing insurance. As I said in class, medical lingo is like it’s own secret language. There’s all these abbreviations and really long, really hard-to-pronounce words that when I first looked at a medical report it was like looking at a document written in hieroglyphics. But I got good at it and have learned to pronounce really hard medical terms, such as, “The patient is experiencing Atrial Pulmonary disfunction” (I don’t really know if that is a term used. Now I work for a recycling facility and use literacy in a difference way. I have to know all the rules of disposing of waste, the correct verbage to use on E-waste reports and what Ferrous and Non-Ferrous metals mean.

I digress. All of this “realization” came after reading Scribner’s article. When Scribner wrote, “people’s literate skills have grown vulnerable to unprecedented turbulence in their economic value, as conditions, forms and standards of literacy achievement seem to shift with almost every new generation of learners” (pg1), I realized that I have three difference forms of literacy: Social literacy, work literacy, and scholastic literacy. And I have the ability to recognize the environment appropriate for each form. I think that is true for a lot of people in my generation and especially for the generations after me. It is quite amazing, in my opinion, that kids are able to subconsciously recognize their environment and automatically switch gears. It is amazing that they are exposed to so many different kinds of sponsors of literacy. It assures me that we will never end up like society in the movie “Idocracy” (which is a great fear of mine).

Who I am

Who I am

I have been in college for the past ten years and have done countless introduction blogs, essays, class announcements, poems and whatever else you can think of to tell people who I am. But I have realized through out these ten years that these assignments never really tell who a person truly is; it’s all surface information that the person can share easily and honestly. For the sake of not boring myself and the people who read this blog, I will be keeping it short and sweet.

I am twenty-eight years old and, like I said, I have been attending college for the past ten years. I did take a break for about a year to figure out if school was for me, and after working in the “real world” at a “grown-up job” which entailed me to do booking keeping, insurance billing and accounts receivable/payable for a three-doctor doctors’ office, I decided that there was SOMETHING else out there for me. In other words, I realized I hated my job and wanted to be something different for the rest of my life. I went back to school and was really inspired by many of my English teachers at Butte College (Shout out to Mark McGinnis- you’re the best!). I wanted to inspire people just like they inspired me so I decided to be an English teacher and now here I am today accomplishing that goal.

I recently quit that previous bookkeeping job I had and found a position at Basik Recycling as an office worker. I love it there and I love being part of a new business that is trying to help the community. For any students out there looking to do some recycling after cleaning up from the night before’s party, bring all that to Basik Recycling cause we have the best prices in town for cans and bottles. (Couldn’t resist-had to do a promo!)

I am excited to be almost done with my degree, as Chico State keeps reminding me with pesky e-mails that I am now a Senior and need to sign up to graduate next spring, but I am admittedly nervous about being a teacher and being in charge of so many impressionable childrens’ education. I don’t want to be the teacher that a student remembers being the worst; or a teacher that a student doesn’t remember at all. I want to be like my all-inspiring teachers I had in college (and a few from high school).

What else…. ummm I am from Orland, CA. To those of you new to this area it’s about twenty miles from Chico so I guess you could say I have grown up/around the Chico area all my life. But it amazes me some of the places in Chico I haven’t heard of or haven’t been to yet. Maybe I’m biased, but this is a great little town. Once you’ve done all the normal drinking, rafting, St. Paddy’s Day stuff stretch your legs in our beautiful parks or venture out to Butte Meadows.

Anyways, that pretty much all I have to say about that. I look forward to getting to know all the peeps in my class and wish everybody luck in their future endeavors!