2019
DOI: 10.17239/l1esll-2019.19.01.10
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Teaching fiction in the age of measurability: Teachers’ perspectives on the hows and whats in Swedish L1 classrooms

Abstract: Studies have shown a slow but steady change in reading habits among students in Swedish upper secondary schools. The frequency with which they read fiction on a daily basis has decreased and reading comprehension has declined. Consequently, Swedish politicians and school authorities have taken measures to reverse these trends. Fiction reading has traditionally been a part of the Swedish subject, but whereas the course syllabi in the upper secondary school stipulate that fiction be taught, they pay little atten… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…There has been a multitude of studies on literature education published the last couple of decades, in Scandinavia as well as internationally. Some focus broadly on L1 paradigms and discourses (Elf & Kaspersen, 2012;Krogh, 2012;Saywer & Van de Ven, 2016;Scholes, 1998;Westbury, 2000), others more specifically on literature instruction, discussing its purpose (Fialho, 2019;Wintersparv et al, 2019;Zabka, 2016), theoretical framework (Abraham, 2016;Witte et al, 2012;Yimwilay, 2015), curriculum (Gourvennec et al, 2020;Witte & Samihaian, 2013), textbooks (Rørbech & Skyggebjerg, 2020), pedagogical praxis (Fialho et al, 2012;Gourvennec, 2017;Sønneland, 2019;Van de Ven & Doecke, 2011a), or effect (Koek et al, 2019;Schrijvers et al 2019). We will return to some of these perspectives and specific studies below, in the section on theoretical framework.…”
Section: Previous Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…There has been a multitude of studies on literature education published the last couple of decades, in Scandinavia as well as internationally. Some focus broadly on L1 paradigms and discourses (Elf & Kaspersen, 2012;Krogh, 2012;Saywer & Van de Ven, 2016;Scholes, 1998;Westbury, 2000), others more specifically on literature instruction, discussing its purpose (Fialho, 2019;Wintersparv et al, 2019;Zabka, 2016), theoretical framework (Abraham, 2016;Witte et al, 2012;Yimwilay, 2015), curriculum (Gourvennec et al, 2020;Witte & Samihaian, 2013), textbooks (Rørbech & Skyggebjerg, 2020), pedagogical praxis (Fialho et al, 2012;Gourvennec, 2017;Sønneland, 2019;Van de Ven & Doecke, 2011a), or effect (Koek et al, 2019;Schrijvers et al 2019). We will return to some of these perspectives and specific studies below, in the section on theoretical framework.…”
Section: Previous Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…International research has shown that there is no consensus about the aims of literary education (Fialho, 2019;Wintersparv et al, 2019), and teachers working at the same school having entirely different views on the aims and function of literature teaching is seen as "typical" (Witte, 2011, p. 100). Such findings can be seen as a natural consequence of what Saywer and van de Ven (2006) call L1 education's polyparadigmatic characteristics, where it is supposed to fulfil a variety of objectives and aims, which allows for several concurrent, competing, and interleaved ideas about what L1 education is and should be.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The development toward instrumentality and measurability is accompanied by ideology critique at the expense of aesthetics (Miller, 2002), which resembles Weber's (1958) claim that scholarly progress has removed the sense of sacredness and ultimate meaning. The instrumental teaching approach is supported by results from a recent study on literature studies (Wintersparv et al, 2019). The study formed the first part of a larger project, in which the current survey aims to further explore the findings, which support those from other Swedish surveys (Ewald, 2007;Johansson, 2014;Lundström et al, 2011), representing a reading mode far from one involving the aesthetics and the Reading Experience, which, De-Malach and Poyas (2018) maintain, is a dominant criterion for a text's appropriateness for teaching.…”
Section: Literature Studies In Swedenmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…Thus, the answer to the negative development why students' reading habits may be sought in a range of factors, of which this study aims to examine the part represented by L1 teachers in Swedish upper secondary schools. In a study by Wintersparv et al (2019) the results suggested that monitoring of students was central to teachers' didactic decision, that there was a hierarchy among both teachers and students with regard to the modality of the text, that instrumentality characteristic of literature studies, that the teaching of literary devices was a norm among the participants, and that literature studies was sometimes made a means to ends in other school subjects. Drawing from these results, I wanted to investigate the teachers' intentions and their aim in teaching literature, as well as their approaches.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%