20 research outputs found

    First Opinion: To Stand in Those Shoes: Multiple Perspectives on Empathy

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    First Opinion: The Complications of Being Charlotte: Alex Gino’s Melissa

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    Editorial: Illuminating Economic Fragility through Children’s Literature

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    Building Loving Fences: Death and Grief in Children’s Literature

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    Second Reaction: Embracing Sadness

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    Editorial: Magical Vessels: Size in Children’s Literature

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    The Promise of Home: Displacement and Belonging in Children’s Literature

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    Critical Lessons and Playful Literacies: Digital Media in PK–2 Classrooms

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    Copyright © 2012 by the National Council of Teachers of English. Used with permission.Digital literacies present opportunities to expand ways of making meaning. Utilizing a New Literacies Studies framework, this article presents critical lessons in film production from a multiple site case study using examples of classroom experience to demonstrate how filmmaking and play come together in a process of storying, a multimodal approach to text composition. Students in both preschool and early elementary contexts expressed an expanded understanding of composing through digital means, utilized technology in sophisticated ways, and accessed their knowledge of popular culture and film conventions through the process of storying

    Changing digital media environments and youth audiovisual productions: A comparison of two collaborative research experiences with south Madrid adolescents

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    SAGE: David Poveda, Marta Morgade, Changing Digital Media Environments and Youth Audiovisual Productions: A Comparison of Two Collaborative Research Experiences with South Madrid Adolescents, Young 26.4 (2018): 34-55 Copyright © 2018SAGE. Reprinted by permission of SAGE PublicationsThis article compares two studies conducted in Madrid in a seven–eight years span in which secondary school students (14–15 years of age) were asked to collaboratively create digital audiovisual narratives. In the first project, adolescents seemed to consider their audiovisual materials as transparent and with self-evident meanings. In the second project, adolescents problematized meaning and reflexively examined the design of audiovisual media. We explore two distinct but complementary factors that might help interpret the differences: (a) rapid historical changes in the digital narratives adolescents are exposed to and engage with and (b) methodological differences in the way adolescents were supported and guided during the creation of their audiovisual narratives. Through this analysis, we draw on an ethnographically grounded notion of ‘mediatization’ that helps unpack both rapid transformations in adolescent’s digital mediascape and how digital practices are socially co-constructed in collaborative projects with youth
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