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Article

Race and class silences in teacher education: resisting strategy-based approaches to literacy methods instruction

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Pages 31-51 | Received 08 Jul 2017, Accepted 15 Feb 2018, Published online: 26 Feb 2018
 

Abstract

This article draws on qualitative and practitioner research methodologies to unpack one critical incident from an undergraduate literacy methods course in which possessing complex understandings of endemic poverty proved central to assessing student achievement. In particular, we use an example of a comprehension lesson based on the children’s book Leah’s Pony as a key example through which to consider the dangers inherent in teaching pre-service teachers to adopt strategies that seem universal and innocuous, like answering comprehension questions or filling in worksheets, outside of broader critiques of social class, racism, poverty and student positioning in schools.

Notes

1. These terms are reflective of how students describe themselves.

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