<p><i>Literacy as Conversation</i> offers a deep dive into community literacy projects that work in both urban and rural areas. It advocates for more partners in shoring up the sagging corners of American communities in which literacy is badly needed, and it provides inspiration to those in search of ideas for their own neighborhoods. The book’s approach encourages readers to understand community literacy first, then see it in action, then consider ways to adopt it in their won corners of the world. Indeed, Goldblatt and Jolliffe’s reminder that ‘literacy is action’ is a powerful epitaph for change.</p>
Teachers College Record
<p><i>Literacy as Conversation</i> is a genuine and important contribution to public discourse about literacy and the work literacy does in the world. Goldblatt and Joliffe offer a much-needed glimpse into how holistic, quality-of-life enhancing networks of literacy could transform communities for the better. Crucially, the authors go farther than most in bridging the divide between specialized academic audiences and more general audiences.</p>
- Paul Feigenbaum, Florida International University,
In Literacy as Conversation, the authors tell stories of successful literacy learning outside of schools and inside communities, both within urban neighborhoods of Philadelphia and rural and semi-rural towns of Arkansas.
A Hopeful Approach to the Problem of Literacy Among Communities in Need
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Eli Goldblatt (Author)
Eli Goldblatt is Professor Emeritus of English at Temple University and former director of New City Writing, an institute focused on community-related literacy projects in North Philadelphia.
David A. Jolliffe (Author)
David Jolliffe is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Arkansas, where he was the initial occupant of the Brown Chair in English Literacy.