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READING TAKES YOU PLACES: A narrative exploration into Intermediate Phase English teachers' experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching

The aim of this narrative study is to explore the development of five Intermediate Phase English teachers' literate habitus and its influence on their conceptions of literacy, and approaches to literature teaching and texts. Literate habitus (Gennrich & Janks, 2013) captures how a teacher's soci...

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Main Author: Gerber, Candice
Other Authors: Mckinney, Carolyn
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Gerber, Candice
author2 Mckinney, Carolyn
author_browse Gerber, Candice
Mckinney, Carolyn
author_facet Mckinney, Carolyn
Gerber, Candice
author_sort Gerber, Candice
collection Thesis
description The aim of this narrative study is to explore the development of five Intermediate Phase English teachers' literate habitus and its influence on their conceptions of literacy, and approaches to literature teaching and texts. Literate habitus (Gennrich & Janks, 2013) captures how a teacher's social background, personal, and professional experiences can play a role in how they negotiate literacy, texts and teaching. Drawing on new literacy studies and a sociocultural approach to literacy pedagogy, links are drawn between the development of each teacher's literate habitus, the conceptions they hold of literacy as autonomous, ideological, or some mix thereof (Gee, 2015), and their approaches to the teaching of texts. Luke and Freebody's four resources model (1999) was used to describe pedagogical choices advocated in the teachers' descriptions of their teaching. Practices involving critical and culturally sustaining pedagogies (Hall, 1998; Luke & Freebody, 1999; Hall, Janks, 2010; Clark & Fleming, 2019), were also traced. Data was collected in the form of semi-structured narrative interviews with five Intermediate Phase English teachers from a variety of backgrounds, teacher education and teaching experiences. Analysis of their narratives through a combination of thematic and discourse analysis, shows the connections between each teacher's literate habitus, their conceptions of literacy, and their described approach to literature teaching. Furthermore, the analysis revealed that the ways in which each teacher negotiated their own habitus, by either accepting, or attempting to adjust or disrupt it, had an influence how they perceived themselves as successful literature teachers. Notably, the Black participants in the study made the largest conscious effort to disrupt their habitus, as they were intent on providing their learners with access to literature learning that was more racially inclusive than their own narrated schooling experiences. Additionally, common factors influencing literature teaching were identified across the interviews, including the use of reading aloud and activities encouraging learner ownership, text relatability, and curricular and institutional limitations on teacher agency. How each teacher chose to negotiate these factors differed, largely in alignment with their literate habitus and conceptions of literacy. This study shows, therefore, that the ways in which a teacher's literate habitus is formed, entrenched, adjusted, or disrupted through their varying experiences plays a role in determining their conceptions of and approaches to literature teaching and texts, so much so that it influences the ways in which they negotiate the factors that exist in their classrooms, such as their perceptions of effective practices, the relatability of the text itself, or the restrictions placed upon their agency as a teacher.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33742 READING TAKES YOU PLACES: A narrative exploration into Intermediate Phase English teachers' experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching Gerber, Candice Mckinney, Carolyn Education The aim of this narrative study is to explore the development of five Intermediate Phase English teachers' literate habitus and its influence on their conceptions of literacy, and approaches to literature teaching and texts. Literate habitus (Gennrich & Janks, 2013) captures how a teacher's social background, personal, and professional experiences can play a role in how they negotiate literacy, texts and teaching. Drawing on new literacy studies and a sociocultural approach to literacy pedagogy, links are drawn between the development of each teacher's literate habitus, the conceptions they hold of literacy as autonomous, ideological, or some mix thereof (Gee, 2015), and their approaches to the teaching of texts. Luke and Freebody's four resources model (1999) was used to describe pedagogical choices advocated in the teachers' descriptions of their teaching. Practices involving critical and culturally sustaining pedagogies (Hall, 1998; Luke & Freebody, 1999; Hall, Janks, 2010; Clark & Fleming, 2019), were also traced. Data was collected in the form of semi-structured narrative interviews with five Intermediate Phase English teachers from a variety of backgrounds, teacher education and teaching experiences. Analysis of their narratives through a combination of thematic and discourse analysis, shows the connections between each teacher's literate habitus, their conceptions of literacy, and their described approach to literature teaching. Furthermore, the analysis revealed that the ways in which each teacher negotiated their own habitus, by either accepting, or attempting to adjust or disrupt it, had an influence how they perceived themselves as successful literature teachers. Notably, the Black participants in the study made the largest conscious effort to disrupt their habitus, as they were intent on providing their learners with access to literature learning that was more racially inclusive than their own narrated schooling experiences. Additionally, common factors influencing literature teaching were identified across the interviews, including the use of reading aloud and activities encouraging learner ownership, text relatability, and curricular and institutional limitations on teacher agency. How each teacher chose to negotiate these factors differed, largely in alignment with their literate habitus and conceptions of literacy. This study shows, therefore, that the ways in which a teacher's literate habitus is formed, entrenched, adjusted, or disrupted through their varying experiences plays a role in determining their conceptions of and approaches to literature teaching and texts, so much so that it influences the ways in which they negotiate the factors that exist in their classrooms, such as their perceptions of effective practices, the relatability of the text itself, or the restrictions placed upon their agency as a teacher. 2021-08-12T09:41:21Z 2021-08-12T09:41:21Z 2021 2021-08-10T11:13:49Z Master Thesis Masters MEd http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33742 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Education
Gerber, Candice
READING TAKES YOU PLACES: A narrative exploration into Intermediate Phase English teachers' experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching
thesis_degree_str Master's
title READING TAKES YOU PLACES: A narrative exploration into Intermediate Phase English teachers' experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching
title_full READING TAKES YOU PLACES: A narrative exploration into Intermediate Phase English teachers' experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching
title_fullStr READING TAKES YOU PLACES: A narrative exploration into Intermediate Phase English teachers' experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching
title_full_unstemmed READING TAKES YOU PLACES: A narrative exploration into Intermediate Phase English teachers' experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching
title_short READING TAKES YOU PLACES: A narrative exploration into Intermediate Phase English teachers' experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching
title_sort reading takes you places a narrative exploration into intermediate phase english teachers experiences with and orientations towards literature teaching
topic Education
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33742
work_keys_str_mv AT gerbercandice readingtakesyouplacesanarrativeexplorationintointermediatephaseenglishteachersexperienceswithandorientationstowardsliteratureteaching