Talking About Literacy

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A01=Jane Mace
adult
Adult Literacy Campaign
Adult Literacy Education
Adult Literacy Scheme
Adult Literacy Work
adult reading improvement strategies
Author_Jane Mace
Can
Category=CFA
Category=CFC
Category=JNP
Clips
Confident Authorship
critical pedagogy
Daily Fare
education
educational equity
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eq_dictionaries-language-reference
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Follow
fresh
glynn
international
International Literacy Year
john
Key Words
learner empowerment
Limited Literacy Skills
Literacy Students
Ma Ma
Message Giver
Minutes Secretary
NUPE
participatory education
Plain English Campaign
Publicity Work
Reading Aloud
social inclusion
start
students
Teaching Confidence
TSD.
UN
Wo
Women Manual Workers
work
writing skills development
year

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415066556
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Jun 1992
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Talking about Literacy re-examines dominant notions of what litreracy is, and challenges the problem-solution reflex to the issue (the problem is illiteracy: the solution is more literacy). Literacy has enormous emotional and political associations, and the job of literacy educator often concerns changing attitudes and challenging prejudices - whether in the form of publicity strategies, counselling new students, or in curriculum design. In short, adult literacy education means not only teaching courses like 'fresh start', 'basic skills', 'study skills', 'communication skills', 'language support' and 'return to study', but also designing strategies to encourage people to see that these courses may meet their own interests - and educating them and others to rethink their own negative attitudes to 'illiteracy'.
The book looks in detail in at five principles put forward by Jane Mace as central to the education of people who often can read, but wish they could read better; who, technically can write, but have a desire to do so with more expression and coherence. These principles focus on five themes: context, inquiy, authorship, equality and community. Since it is all too easy for literacy education involving adults who do not have formal qualifications to stop short of teaching techniques for 'correct' writing, these principles mean taking seriously a view that adult students are writers as well as readers - that they have an entitlement to be read, as well as to read others.

Jane Mace has worked for twenty years in adult literacy and community education. At Cambridge House Literacy Scheme, as tutor-organiser and then Director, she contributed to the shaping of policy in adult literacy programmes during the early years of the adult literacy campaign in the UK. At the Lee Community Education Centre, Goldsmiths’ College, she co-ordinated a programme of courses and projects in literacy, women’s education, reminiscence work and workplace training. As Senior Lecturer in Community Education at Goldsmiths’ College, her work now concerns research and development in the same areas

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