Using Ethnography and 'Real Lteracies' to Develop a Curriculum for English Literacy Teaching for Young Deaf Adults in India
Abstract
This paper reports on an international collaborative project working with deaf learners of English literacy (19–28 years old) in five locations in India: Indore; Vadadora; Comibatore; Pattambi; and Thrissur. Indian Sign Language (ISL) was the language of instruction. The project drew on a social practices view of literacy. Deaf peer tutors were trained in creating lessons using authentic materials: texts collected from students’ everyday lives. Tutors and students shared content via an online teaching resource. In the paper, the authors draw on notes from the training, tutor and student data, to clarify the strengths and challenges of this approach. Real literacies were used fruitfully, but authentic texts could be complex and grammar lessons were often unrelated to these texts. This challenged our assumptions about the applicability of the real literacies concept to pedagogy. Nevertheless, the study confirms the value of an approach that privileges ISL, peer tuition and online materials.
Citation
Uta Papen & Karin Tusting (2020) Using ethnography and ‘real literacies’ to develop a curriculum for English literacy teaching for young deaf adults in India, Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 50:8, 1140-1158, DOI: 10.1080/03057925.2019.1585756DOI
10.1080/03057925.2019.1585756More details
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2019.1585756Rights holder
© 2019 The Author(s). Published by InformaUK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis GroupRights details
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Collections
- Education [103]