
BOYS, LITERACIES AND SCHOOLING
The Dangerous Territories of Gender-based Literacy Reform
Open University Press
Published on 16. December 2001
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-0-335-20756-5 (ISBN)
Description
Current debates about boys and schooling in many Western nations are increasingly characterised by a sense of crisis as government reports, academic research and the day to day experiences of teachers combine to indicate that:
* boys are consistently underperforming in literacy
* boys are continuing to opt out of English and humanities
* boys represent the majority of behaviour problems and counselling referrals
* boys receive a disproportionate amount of special education support
This book responds to the complexity of the current debates associated with boys, gender reform, literacy and schooling by offering a clear map of the current context, highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of the various competing solutions put forward, and outlining a range of practical classroom interventions designed for dealing with the boys/literacy crisis. The authors consider the ways in which particular views of masculinity, gender reform, literacy, technology and popular culture can either open up or close down new conceptualisations of what it means to be a boy and what it means to be literate.
* boys are consistently underperforming in literacy
* boys are continuing to opt out of English and humanities
* boys represent the majority of behaviour problems and counselling referrals
* boys receive a disproportionate amount of special education support
This book responds to the complexity of the current debates associated with boys, gender reform, literacy and schooling by offering a clear map of the current context, highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of the various competing solutions put forward, and outlining a range of practical classroom interventions designed for dealing with the boys/literacy crisis. The authors consider the ways in which particular views of masculinity, gender reform, literacy, technology and popular culture can either open up or close down new conceptualisations of what it means to be a boy and what it means to be literate.
Reviews / Votes
"...very interesting in terms of discourse analysis and gender issues in education. I would recommend the book to students and teachers involved in researching gender issues...an interesting and helpful discussion of the limitations of quick-fix solutions." - Improving SchoolsMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Milton Keynes
United Kingdom
Illustrations
index
Dimensions
Height: 228 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
414 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-335-20756-5 (9780335207565)
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Colin Lankshear is Professor of Literacy and New Technologies at James Cook University, Australia, Visiting Scholar at McGill University, Canada, and an Adjunct Teacher at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico.
Content
Introduction
Dangerous places
debates about boys, girls, schooling and gender based literacy reform
What about the boys?
the rhetoric and realities of the new gender crisis
How, who, where, when, why and what way?
mindsets on gender reform in schools
Some really useful theoretical company for transforming and transformative literacy education
Mindsets matter
an overview of major literacy worldviews
Making it not so
transformative literacy practices for girls and boys
Exorcising digital demons
information technology, new literacies and the de/re-construction of gendered subjectivities
From Pacman to Pokemon
cross generational perspectives on gender and reform in a 'post-feminist' age
Conclusion
Index.
Dangerous places
debates about boys, girls, schooling and gender based literacy reform
What about the boys?
the rhetoric and realities of the new gender crisis
How, who, where, when, why and what way?
mindsets on gender reform in schools
Some really useful theoretical company for transforming and transformative literacy education
Mindsets matter
an overview of major literacy worldviews
Making it not so
transformative literacy practices for girls and boys
Exorcising digital demons
information technology, new literacies and the de/re-construction of gendered subjectivities
From Pacman to Pokemon
cross generational perspectives on gender and reform in a 'post-feminist' age
Conclusion
Index.