Title: Advanced Literacies in the content areas
1Advanced Literacies in the content areas
- Kristina Love
- Australian Catholic University
2Overview
- The concept of Advanced Literacies
- Working with advanced literacies in Australia
- Future challenges
31. Literacy some premises
- A major responsibility of all teachers,
regardless of the subjects they teach, is to
develop their students skills in handling
literacy, both in reading and in writing. - Proficiency in reading will help develop
proficiency in writing, and vice versa - Carefully structured oral interactions also help
build literacy
4Literacies insights from research
- Modern literacy is very diverse and complex,
often requiring images, diagrams and graphs to be
read and interpreted, alongside words. - The nature of literacy changes fundamentally from
Year 1 to Year 12, and the foundations laid in
the early years are not sufficient to support the
complex literacy demands of the later years of
schooling
5Theoretical insights into advanced literacies
- Christie Stenglin, 2006
- Christie Derewianka 2008
- Coffin, 1997, 2010
- Fang Schleppegrell 2008
- Schellepgrel Colombi, 2001
- Unsworth, 2006, 2010
- Veel, 1997
6Year 3 Science
- The Little pygmy possum is the smallest in the
possum family - Its body is 5 to 65 centimeters long and its
tail is another 6 centimetres. It weighs around 7
grms. It has a cone shaped head. Its fur is a
soft brown colour with a tight grey belly. It has
very large rounded eyes. Its big toe, known as a
hallax on each foot helps it to climb balanced
with its tail which curls and grips branches. - (from Christie Stenglin, 2006)
7Advanced Literacy Year 7 Science
- The cells that line the nasal cavities have
cilia, tiny hairlike extensions that can move
together like whips. The whiplike motion of these
cilia sweeps mucus into the throat, where it is
swallowed. - Identify potential language challenges.
8- Technical language
- Long noun groups
- Re-packaging of noun-gt adjective (whiplike)
- Nominalisation (move -gt motion)
- Info in first sentence is compressed and becomes
the point of departure for further elaboration in
second sentence. - This facilitates scientific reasoning, but
challenges readers to unpack densely organised
information
- The cells that line the nasal cavities have
cilia, tiny hairlike extensions that can move
together like whips. The whiplike motion of these
cilia sweeps mucus into the throat, where it is
swallowed.
9Advanced literacy Maths
Congruent (spoken -like) form Nominalized (written-like) form
how long something is how far across something is how far off the ground something is length width height
- Relationships between multiple abstractions
- Area Length x Width
- Volume Area x Height
10Nominalisation and abstraction
- The demands of increasingly technical and
abstract mathematical language accumulate
dramatically by high school, when many struggling
learners are left behind. - Teachers who can explicitly discuss such language
features with their students, and their role in
making mathematical meanings, can engage them
more deeply with mathematical content (Huang
Normandia, 2008). - See NSW Maths for Literacy paper pg 9.
11Scaffolding advanced literacies through talk
Maths
- T. What distance do you have to measure?S. The
distance.T. Which distance?S. The distance from
the vertex.T. Which vertex?S. (pointing) That
one.T. Can you be more precise?S. The top left
vertex.T. OK. So what do we measure?S. The
distance from the top left vertex.
12- T. Good. To where?S. The outside of the other
shape. T. Im not sure what you mean. Where on
the other shape?S. The bottom left hand
corner.T. OK. And what do we call that shape?S.
The object.T. OK. So the lines going to S.
The bottom left vertex of the object.T. OK. Put
that all together and tell me what youre
measuring, what distance?S. The distance from
the top left vertex of the image to the bottom
left vertex of the object. - Transcript Robert Veel, 1997
13The language of mathematical reasoning
- Precision in use of language for locating and
measuring - Use of abstract and technical concepts
- Written-like conventions of the language
preferred over spoken-like - endophoric, not exophoric reference
- lengthy noun groups.
14The challenge of advanced literacies
- Primary school cannot prepare readers for the
specialised reading in high school eg - Literary works
- Historical documents
- Scientific explanations
- Mathematical problems
- Here, Ss engage with more complex combinations
of genres, in new contexts of learning that are
further removed from their personal and everyday
lives
15Increased complexity of generic structure
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18From recounting history
- Year 10 History
- By 1929, American factories were turning out
nearly half of the worlds industrial goods. The
rising productivity led to enormous profits.
However, this new wealth was not evenly
distributed. - How has information been packaged to build from
sentence to sentence? - Students can be explicitly taught to identify how
information is presented in one sentence, then
re-packaged as the point of departure for the
next sentence.
19 to critiquing history
- From a text used to teach about the causes of the
Boxer Rebellion in China. - Imperialist powers had been competing to carve
the country into spheres of influence for years,
while enforced opium addiction and widespread
corruption had reduced most of the populace to
abject poverty (Denny, 2008) - Students must unpack abstract and highly
nominalised concepts (bolded). - and recognise that what are presented as
facts are often interpretations to be
evaluated, as historians make more or less
explicit judgements about the people and events
in history.
20Recognizing ideology
- In evaluating the Boxer text as a commentary on a
period of Chinese history, students must assess
the writers 21st century post-colonial stance by
focusing on his choice of value-laden epithets
(abject), verbs (carved and reduced) and
nouns (corruption). - Students need support in learning to read in
these highly specialised ways, drawing attention
to how such language operates to construct a
particular argument about history - ie learning to be critical historians, able to
interrogate various viewpoints.
21Learning to interrogate
- In evaluating the Boxer text as a commentary on a
period of Chinese history, students must assess
the writers 21st century post-colonial stance by
focusing on his choice of value-laden epithets
(abject), verbs (carved and reduced) and
nouns (corruption). - Students need support in learning to read in
these highly specialised ways, drawing attention
to how such language operates to construct a
particular argument about history - ie learning to be critical historians, able to
interrogate various viewpoints.
22Interrogating multimodally
- Web site on the one child policy in China
http//factsanddetails.com/china.php?itemid128ca
tid4subcatid15
23Advanced literacies and multimodal texts
- The multi-generic and multi-modal nature of
texts in education - LASS Unit 5 Screens 3-6, 11-1
24Advanced literacies and image-text relations
- New research into image-text relations
- Image equals () verbal text
- Image adds to () verbal text
- Image elaborates on (x) verbal text
- Image contradicts (-) verbal text
- Unsworth http//www.pucsp.br/isfc. Proceedings
33rd International Systemic Functional Congress
2006
25Image (clarifies) verbal text
- In the verbiage, the information about fly traps
is simply constructed fly traps from old PET
drink containers to catch flies. The nature of
the trap and how it catches flies are clarified
by the image.
26Image (extends) Text
- In the verbal text, the absorption of evaporated
moisture in the air, its movement and eventual
precipitation is described without any mention of
'clouds'. It is in the diagram that the formation
and transport of clouds and precipitation from
them are specified
27Image x (elaborates) text
- When an image enhances the text by adding
causal, temporal or spatial meanings - The cropped colour photograph relates to the bold
caption below it by manner/means
28Image - (contradicts) text
- Pictorially the levels are allocated equal
proportions - Verbal text states that each level is of
radically different depth - What is explicitly stated in the verbiage about
the relative depths of the different ocean zones,
is strongly visually contradicted.
292. Working with advanced literacies
- Zammitt Framework for multiliteracies
- BUILT, LASS and LASS
- Other curriculum support materials focus on
Maths - NSW materials on Maths
- Parkin Hayes article (program with Indigenous
communities)
30Zammitt (2006) Framework for multiliteracies
31Using the Framework
- Evaluate the pedagogy underpinning this TLF site
- http//www.thelearningfederation.edu.au/for_teache
rs/sample_curriculum_content/tm_-_civics_and_citiz
enship.html
32BUILT
33BUILTs structure
34Literacy Across the School Subjects
- New film footage of high school teachers
- New insights from research on Academic Literacies
- Updated technologies
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36A taste of LASS
- Unit 1 interviews with world experts, students
and teachers (Gatachi, Screen 20, video 2) - Unit 4 Screen 3 Frogs exercise
- Unit 5 multimodal genres
- Units 6 7 supporting literacy pedagogy
- Unit 8 planning around literacy.
37LASS Plus (Recounts)
- First in a series of 6
- http//www.eshowcase.unimelb.edu.au/packages/lass
38Other curriculum materials
- Focus on Maths
- NSW materials on Maths
- Parkin Hayes article (program with Indigenous
communities)
393. Challenges
40Challenges in Sweden?
- Teachers attitudes?
- Resources development?
- Others?
41References
- Christie Stenglin, 2006 Understanding English
language and literacy development
http//www.edfac.unimelb.edu.au/knowledgetransfer/
downloads/LiteracyPositionPaper.pdf - Christie, F Derewianka, B (2008) School
Discourse. Continuum Press - Fang, Z. and Schellepgrell, M. (2008) Reading in
the secondary content areas a language based
pedagogy. Ann Arbor University of Michigan
Press. - Gibbons, P. 2002. Scaffolding Language,
Scaffolding Learning Teaching Second Language
Learners in the Mainstream Classroom. Portsmouth,
NH Heinemann. - Kress, G. (2003) Literacy in the New Media Age,
Routledge, London and NY. - Love K, Pigdon K, Baker G, with Hamston J. (2005)
Building Understandings in Literacy and Teaching
(BUILT) CD ROM 3rd Edition, The University of
Melbourne, Vic. - Love K, Baker G, and Quinn, M. (2008) Literacy
Across the School Subjects (LASS) DVD, The
University of Melbourne, Vic. - Schellepgrell, M. C. Colombi Eds (2002)
Developing Advanced Literacy in first and second
languages meaning with power. Hillsdale, NJ
Erlbaum - Unsworth, L. (2006) E-literature for children
Enhancing digital literacy learning. Routledge - Unsworth, L. (2007) Image/text relations and
intersemiosis Towards multimodal text
description for multiliteracies education. Online
publication available at http//www.pucsp.br/isfc.