Title: Andrew W' Habana Hafner
1 Creating Third Spaces in Middle School Language
Arts Curriculum with Hip Hop Texts
Andrew W. Habana Hafner University of
Massachusetts Amherst The ACCELA
Alliance English Language Development
Conference Boston College - Teachers for a New
Era September 24, 2007
2Core Constructs
- Third spaces are in-between spaces of lived
experience that are productive social mediations
of multiple and competing discourses working to
reshape knowledges and social identities - Hybridity - sites of productive tension cultural
dissonance reappropriation of colonizing
discourses (e.g. official school texts) - Funds of knowledge - non-school literacies from
culture, peer, family, popular culture, etc. - Permeability - openness to the childrens lived
experience and language negotiated classroom
culture dialogic meaning-making -
3Hip Hop Genres Third Spaces
- Hip Hop can be used as a bridge linking
seemingly vast spans between the streets and the
world of academics. Hip Hop texts, given their
thematic nature, can be equally valuable as
springboards for critical discussions about
contemporary issues facing urban youth. - (Morrell Duncan-Andrade, 2002)
4Research Question
- How does the integration of Hip Hop genres in
formal curriculum create third spaces to promote
academic and critical literacy for culturally and
linguistically diverse students in urban
classrooms?
5Preliminary Findings
- Third spaces stem from the focal teachers
willingness to take personal pedagogical risks
to engage students in the writing life about
their lived experiences. - Integration of Hip Hop genres promoted student
investment in building academic literacy while
thinking and writing critically about real-world
experiences.
6Context of Curriculum Unit
- Alternative program for highly mobile students
and their families - Teacher is a 18 year veteran teacher white
woman life-long local resident - Focal Group 3 bilingual Latino males, 1 white
male varied experiences of homelessness,
social/child services, foster care, probation
officers, interrupted schooling, substance abuse - The Writing Life unit introduces craft of
writing for authentic and personal purposes based
on everyday lived experiences
7Shaping Third Spaces Risk Taking w/ Hip Hop
Genres
- Slide from teachers graduate course
presentation reflecting on taking risks with Hip
Hop genres
8Transformative Texts Teaching Learning The
Writing Life
9Writing Life from Thug Life Tupac as
literate model
10Writing LifeMiguels first piece
Tired of Not being understood. Understand
me, Dont ignore me, I feel small, Im like
burning paper, Put out my fire Tired of being
ignored TIRED
At the end of the unit, discussing
metacognitively why listening to music helps
their writing process Like Tupac, talking
about real life, I love that.
11Sheltering Instructions mediating textual
spaces of homelessness
- I go downstairs
- to adults acting like kids
- and kids acting like adults
- passing gossip around
- like they were ten
- hitting kids with
- no pain or care
- -Mark, 10.27.04
Video clip
12Hybrid Cultures Community in Third Space
- Thirdspace becomes a productive hybrid cultural
space, rather than a fragmented angst-ridden
psychological space, only if teachers and
students incorporate divergent texts in the hope
of generating new knowledges and Discourses
(Moje, et al, 2004). - Hybrid agencies find their voice in a dialectic
that does not seek cultural supremacy or
sovereignty and construct visions of community
that give narrative form to the minority
positions they occupy. (Bhabha, 1994)
13Implications for Teaching Finding third spaces
in unfamiliar places
- The transformative potential of dialogical
risk-taking in shaping and mediating third spaces
in schools. - Teachers as well as children must be open,
curious, and willing to imagine worlds beyond
their own Building on what children do is
not so easy, because doing so involves granting
legitimacy and visibility to social purposes and
cultural materials that educators may view as
trivial, irrelevant, and even distasteful. - (Dyson, 1993)
14Implications for LearningThird Spaces Hip Hop
Genres
- Literacy becomes a vehicle by which the
oppressed are equipped with the necessary tools
to reappropriate their history, culture, and
language practices. - Hip Hop music and culture can be utilized to
forge a common and critical discourse that is
centered upon the lives of the students, yet
transcends the racial divide and allows us to
tap into students lives in ways that promote
academic literacy and critical consciousness. - (Morrell Duncan-Andrade 2002).