2011
DOI: 10.20360/g2x590
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Watercolors Awash in Crayoned Responses: Teaching Narrative in Arts-based Praxis

Abstract: I work in literacy education, encouraging teacher candidates to experiment with the arts to make a novel come alive for adolescent readers. Part of my research agenda, which is intertwined with my teaching, seeks to make sense of the question: What are the effects of arts-based learning on the teacher candidates' theoretical and classroom practices? To first consider the above research question from my own pedagogical perspective, I draw on my earlier recollections (Adler, 1958) of arts and classroom living us… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The ability to imagine a better world, an alternative to how systems of oppression currently operate, an illumination that reconceptualises current ways of being-that is what engagement with multiliteracies ultimately strives for. Morawski (2008) remarks, "Maxine Greene (1991 challenges us that 'the arts offer opportunities for perspective, for perceiving alternate ways of transcending and being in the world'" (p. 9). The New London Group calls for civic pluralism, which argues for citizens of diverse backgrounds to find meaningful ways to engage with one another and proposes that people need to "have the chance to expand their cultural and linguistic repertoires so that they can access a broader range of cultural and institutional resources" (1996, p. 15).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The ability to imagine a better world, an alternative to how systems of oppression currently operate, an illumination that reconceptualises current ways of being-that is what engagement with multiliteracies ultimately strives for. Morawski (2008) remarks, "Maxine Greene (1991 challenges us that 'the arts offer opportunities for perspective, for perceiving alternate ways of transcending and being in the world'" (p. 9). The New London Group calls for civic pluralism, which argues for citizens of diverse backgrounds to find meaningful ways to engage with one another and proposes that people need to "have the chance to expand their cultural and linguistic repertoires so that they can access a broader range of cultural and institutional resources" (1996, p. 15).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The two main premises of their arguments were (a) to consider the role in a global society of shifting and hybrid versions of linguistic and cultural diversity, which challenge the notion of a standard norm for any language, thus taking into account "our culturally and linguistically diverse and increasingly globalised societies" (p. 9); and (b) to explore the implications of technology, media, and multimodalities as part of what constitutes literacies (Cope & Kalantzis, New London Group, 2000). As Lo Bianco and Freebody (New London Group, 2000;1996) put it, The Multiliteracies Project aims to develop a pluralistic educational response to trends in the economic, civic and personal spheres of life which impact on meaning-making and therefore on literacy. These changes call for a new foundational literacy which imparts the ability to understand increasingly complex language and literacy codes; the ability to use the multiple modes in which those codes are transmitted and put to use; and the capacity to understand and generate the rich and more elaborate meanings they convey.…”
Section: The Ecology Arts-based Model and A Multiliteracies Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…I find myself continually compelled by the need to make sense of my life in language/arts. The parts that specific recollections play in the enactment of my teaching already exist in the pages of academic sites (Morawski, 2008(Morawski, , 2009(Morawski, , 2010Morawski & Palulis 2009). The piece that follows adds to these narrations.…”
Section: Prologuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…To introduce a stanza on falling leaves, I reach for words smuggled in a wrinkled sleeve. O'Reilly-Scanlon ( 2002 from the mind and body to the page: Sometimes with structure and explanation (Morawski, 2008Morawski & Palulis, 2009, while at other times with the simplicity of performance (Morawski, 2009(Morawski, , 2010; each time that I enter a memory, the ensuing changes in my narrative shifts to enlighten and revise my teaching practice in the present. Just as Cisneros (2007) said about what she would do at the end of her writing on Mango Street, I will now go away to come back, back where memories loom and hide, waiting to enter and once again revise my recurring narrative of teaching.…”
Section: Quiet Anticipation Fidgets the Nearby Handles Of Relabeled Bags The Pull Of Luggage Packs Crowds Into Temporary Quarters Enterinmentioning
confidence: 99%