10 research outputs found

    Developing Contemporary Literacies through Sports: A Guide for the English Classroom

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    Bryan Ripley Crandall is a contributing author, Promoting democracy through sports, community and dialogue with The Crossover. Book description: Love them or loathe them, the prominence of sports in schools and society is undeniable. The emphasis on sports culture presents teachers with countless possibilities for engaging students in the English language arts. Whether appealing to students’ passion for sports to advance literacy practices or inviting students to reconsider normalized views by examining sports culture through a critical lens, teachers can make sports a pedagogical ally. This book, a collection of lessons and commentaries from established teachers, teacher educators, scholars, and authors, will support teachers in turning students’ extracurricular interests into legitimate options for academic study. With seven interrelated sections—facilitating literature study, providing alternatives to traditional novels, teaching writing, engaging students in inquiry and research, fostering media and digital literacies, promoting social justice, and developing out-of-school literacies—this collection and its companion website provide numerous resources that support teachers in developing students’ contemporary literacies through sports. Each section includes (1) four lesson plans written by practicing English teachers and teacher educators that focus on a specific topic and/or method of instruction; (2) a brief introduction from a leading scholar in the field of English education, including Wendy Glenn, Chris Crowe, Joan F. Mitchell, Jeffrey D. Wilhelm, Carl A. Young, Lisa Scherff, and Thomas Newkirk; and (3) a closing “author connection” in which contemporary authors of sports-related young adult literature—Alan Lawrence Sitomer, Ann E. Burg, Chris Lynch, Rich Wallace and Sandra Neil Wallace, Lisa Luedeke, Bill Konigsberg, and Chris Crutcher—offer reflections on and connections to the ongoing conversations. In giving voice to so many literacy educators and authors, including forewords by English teacher educator Peter Smagorinsky and acclaimed sports journalist and fiction and nonfiction writer Robert Lipsyte, as well as an afterword by professor emeritus Joseph O. Milner, editors Alan Brown and Luke Rodesiler have made a giant first step in their call to make public the practice of promoting critical sports literacy as a way of reaching all students in the middle and high school classroom.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/education-books/1059/thumbnail.jp

    Silent decisions: What to consider when selecting qualitative data analysis methods?

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    In this presentation we discuss the importance of informed uses of analysis methods especially when considering the multiplicity of analytics available for qualitative researchers and diverse justifications for analysis methods present in the literature. Five presenters will share the theoretical, practical, and personal considerations that have guided their method selections especially those considerations that are often left unspoken and not reported in textbooks or research articles

    Social Media & Teacher Professional Development

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    The idea of social media’s existing application and future potential for professional development drives a growing subset of academic research. As we encourage preservice and inservice teachers to engage in these platforms to hone or refine their classroom practice, a number of questions emerge: How do we assess participation in these spaces? What uses in particular should we recommend? Further, the very notion of conducting research in these spaces also poses interesting questions. From methodologies to frameworks, commonly accepted practices help shape the future of the field. Lastly, the issue of privacy and policy poses perhaps the most significant area for attention. The intent of this panel discussion is generate conversation on how future research and application on social media usage and research might evolve over time

    Ladies first: Studying short documentaries about women in sport

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    This article explores a series of short films that delve into various issues that exist for elite female athletes, from extreme wage disparity to blatant sexualization, and offers engaging ways to analyze them with students

    Introduction: Critical sports literacy

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    Developing contemporary literacies through sports: A guide for the English classroom

    No full text
    Love them or loathe them, the prominence of sports in schools and society is undeniable. The emphasis on sports culture presents teachers with countless possibilities for engaging students in the English language arts. Whether appealing to students’ passion for sports to advance literacy practices or inviting students to reconsider normalized views by examining sports culture through a critical lens, teachers can make sports a pedagogical ally. This book, a collection of lessons and commentaries from established teachers, teacher educators, scholars, and authors, will support teachers in turning students’ extracurricular interests into legitimate options for academic study. With seven interrelated sections—facilitating literature study, providing alternatives to traditional novels, teaching writing, engaging students in inquiry and research, fostering media and digital literacies, promoting social justice, and developing out-of-school literacies—this collection and its companion website provide numerous resources that support teachers in developing students’ contemporary literacies through sports

    Intertextuality and representational dialogue in qualitative research

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    The purpose of this presentation is to expand traditional forms of qualitative data representation. We will share our use of VoiceThread, an online tool that allows users to hold conversations around media, to display our process of discourse analysis and to dialogue around the data, revealing the voices of the researchers, a critical friend, and a participant. Through this tool, we were able to illustrate the intertextuality that we see in qualitative research and the study of media literacy
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