Why is it
implied so often that literacy can be fixed, categorised, quantified and
assessed, when in fact, Literacy shifts and differs from individual to
individual? Such an enquiry raises
further questions about how and why we engage in practices which encourage
educators to categorise, quantify and assess literacy. To address this we might consider some
differing philosophical viewpoints about literacy. First: Autonomous Literacy.
A Quick Guide to: Autonomous Literacy.
·
Teaching literacy (ie. Improving a person’s ability to
read and write), will yield a
range of benefits for that student.
·
Amongst
these are self-efficacy, personal belief and positive self-esteem.
·
Other
benefits include an improved ability to think critically and express oneself in
more metacognitive ways, due to the widened vocabulary and access to texts that
can liberate and empower the student.
·
The
economic benefits for the student include widened access to better jobs, higher
salary expectations, adoption of values related to joining more productive
sectors of society,
·
Literacy
allows students to transfer their learned skills and expectations to their
children.
·
Literacy
acquisition means transferable skills.
·
Literacy
improves a person’s fitness to adapt to other more demanding tasks in a
fast-moving increasingly demanding multiliterate world and job-market.
·
The role
of the educator is to liberate and democratise education so that those
previously denied education may
get the access they deserve, and share in its societal benefits.
·
Unfortunately, those student who fail to take
advantage of such opportunities are responsible their own shortcomings, and
blamed for not participating in a club they were never told weren’t members of.
So, to what extend does this describe you?
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