Fwd: question about literacy

From: Peter Smagorinsky (smago@coe.uga.edu)
Date: Wed Mar 12 2003 - 10:14:15 PST


I got this inquiry today from someone who attended a talk I gave last fall
in Atlanta. Can anyone help me recommend books or articles that are
accessible to a bright high school kid on what we might call new literacy
studies? thanks,Peter

>Hello Dr. Smagorinsky,
>
>I met you at the College Board conference last fall. I'm the son of a
>former language ed. member and I currently teach at Meadowcreek High School
>in Norcross.
>
> A student of mine just came in here asking some rather sophisticated
>questions about literacy. He wanted to know how come the letter-writing of
>the Civil War generation seemed to engender a surge in literacy, but the
>email craze of the current generation seemed to be leading to a decline in
>literacy. He cited the story of a girl in England who is supposed to have
>written an entire school essay in email lingo and was astonished when she
>got a poor grade.
>
>I cautioned him to be careful about assigning cause-effect relationships
>and started to talk about expanded definitions of literacy, but I assume he
>can find this stuff for himself. But I need to know where to send him,
>what names to look for. Can you alert me to some names and/or titles -
>stuff that would be accessible to a bright high school student - on the
>theme of literacy?
>
>I appreciate your help and I enjoyed your talk last fall. You had some
>traditionalist heads spinning, but they need to spun. My own view of the
>effect of technology on literacy is that we should both embrace the changes
>in literacy and expressive opportunities that new technologies bring, but
>we should also be careful to recognize what we're losing and try to
>preserve what is essential from older forms of literacy. A difficult
>trick to pull off.
>
>Thanks again!
>
>Jim l



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Apr 01 2003 - 01:00:07 PST