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| Connecting
Home and School Literacy Practices in Classrooms with Diverse Populations
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Sarah
J. McCarthey
University of Texas
at Austin |
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I
present the cases of 5 students from diverse backgrounds and conclude
that home and school are more connected for some students than for
others. Home and school were tightly connected for middle-class European-American
students who read at home and school, shared their writing with the
class, and brought items from home to show peers. In contrast, students
from non-mainstream backgrounds participated in home literacy activities
that did not match school experiences. These students were more reticent
in the classroom, did not share items from home, and experienced home
and school as separate. In the analysis, books, tasks, and participation
structures contributed to some students making stronger connections
than others. Teachers having more information about some students
than others; their own middle-class European-American backgrounds
and the need to treat all students “equally”; and their assumptions
that students could make the connections between home and school on
their own contributed to the curriculum being more congruent with
middle-class, home literacy experiences than working-class experiences.
Although I suggest that learning about students’ cultures and backgrounds
is essential, I delineate some of the challenges that accompany learning
about students. |
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JLR
v.
29 no. 2
1997
pp. 145–182 |
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