Literacy practices in the learning careers of childcare students

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Permanent URL for this page: http://hdl.voced.edu.au/10707/115387.


Author: Smith, June M.; Satchwell, Candice; Edwards, Richard; Miller, Kate; Fowler, Zoe; Gaechter, Joyce; Knowles, Joanne; Phillipson, Christine; Young, Rosheen

Abstract:

This paper draws from the Literacies for Learning in Further Education research project, funded through the Teaching and Learning Research Programme. Drawing on the empirical study of literacy practices in eight childcare courses in Scotland and England, we seek to demonstrate that, integral to the learning careers of students are literacy careers through which their learning is mediated. In the process, by drawing upon the lens of literacy, we also challenge some of the common-sense understandings of learning in childcare. In particular, we suggest that the literacy practices of lower level courses can be more diverse than those of higher level courses, producing potentially confusing literacy careers for the students involved. We also highlight the complexity of the range of literacy practices in childcare, which can go unrecognised as requiring explicit tuition, and unacknowledged even when students use them appropriately. Courses in childcare are textually mediated in many different ways, which vary depending on the level of study. A greater acknowledgement of this multiplicity and diversity could lead to more appropriate forms of assessment, and more relevant ways of interpreting the curriculum. We argue that students on vocational courses have more complex literacy careers than is often assumed and that a literacies approach to learning helps to reveal this complexity.

Published abstract reprinted by permission of the copyright owner.

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This paper draws from the Literacies for Learning in Further Education research project, funded through the Teaching and Learning Research Programme. Drawing on the empirical study of literacy practices in eight childcare courses in Scotland and England, we seek to demonstrate that, integral to the learning careers of students are literacy careers through which their learning is mediated. In the process, by drawing upon the lens of literacy, we also challenge some of the common-sense understandings of learning in childcare. In particular, we suggest that the literacy practices of lower ...  [+] Show more

Subjects: Vocational education and training; Literacy; Career development; Industry; Skills and knowledge; Teaching and learning

Keywords: Skill development; Postcompulsory education

Geographic subjects: Europe; Great Britain; England; Scotland

Published: Abingdon, England: Routledge, Taylor & Francis, 2008

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Journal title: Journal of vocational education and training

Journal volume : 60

Journal number: 4

Journal date: December 2008

Pages: pp.363-375

ISSN: 1363-6820 (print); 1747-5090 (online)

Statement of responsibility: June Smith ... [et al.]

Resource type: Article

Call Number:
TD/TNC 94.689



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