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Schmidt, C. (2013)
The question of access and design – Elin and Hassan walk the line of the four resources model.
Education Inquiry, 4(2): 301-314
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Education Inquiry
Vol. 4, No. 2, June 2013, pp. 301–314
EDU.
INQ.
The question of access and design –
Elin and Hassan walk the line of the four
resources model
Catarina Schmidt*
Abstract
This article focuses on the question of access and design in literacy education. Drawing on an
ethnographical study, two children’s experiences of texts1 and socialisation in relation to literacy
are mirrored through the Four Resources Model (Luke & Freebody, 1999). What does access and
design mean in relation to this model and how is it manifested through the perspectives of Elin and
Hassan? The empirical findings indicate that the text resources distributed in school are limited
and that more possibilities for meaning and identity making through texts related to own experiences – and differences – are needed. It is concluded that the paradox of access to dominant forms
of literacies as well as new alternatively literacies is not a question of either-or, but the complex
core of a dialogical, dialectical and democratic literacy education where the possibilities of design
in order to re-write and re-read the world are necessary and crucial.
Keywords: literacy education, text repertoires, access, design, democracy
Introduction
Through the study of literacy practices cross-culturally in different domains and discourses in relation to different languages, lingual systems, modalities and technologies,
research within New Literacy Studies has highlighted a pluralistic and heterogeneous
concept of literacy (Barton, 1994; Gee, 1996; Heath, 1983; Street, 1984, 1993). Above
all, the connection between power and literacy has become transparent and brought
forward literacies as ideological, positioning readers in different ways. Research on
critical literacies opens up possibilities for negotiation, repositioning and re-designing within literacy education (Comber & Simpson, 2001; Comber & Kamler, 2004;
Comber & Nixon, 2004; Janks, 2000, 2010; Vasquez, 2004). Alan Luke and Peter
Freebody (1999) describe how effective literacy invites and allows children to take
part in practices supporting not only the coding, use and meaning making of texts,
but also a critical analysis of texts. In this article, the question of the access and design
of literacy education will be discussed from the perspectives of two children, here
named Elin and Hassan. Their access to text repertoires and practices supporting
*Örebro University, School of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences, and Jönköping University, School of Education and
Communication, Sweden. E-mail: catarina.schmidt@hlk.hj.se
©Authors. ISSN 2000-4508, pp. 301–314
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literacy will be problematised in relation to the Four Resources Model (ibid.) and to
the question of design. The empirics in this article are drawn from a case study within
a larger ongoing ethnographical research project conducted by the national research
school LIMCUL2 at Örebro University in Sweden. The research project focuses on
children’s literacies in a multicultural and multilingual context in Sweden in and out
of school. Empirical data were accumulated through participant observations, group
and individual interviews, and photographs. The study started in 2010 when Elin and
Hassan were nine years old and finished at the end of 2012 when they were eleven.
In this article empirical material from grades three and four is used.
The Middle School Years – Elin and Hassan
At the age of nine and ten, the need to handle long and compact texts increases. In
the syllabus for the subject of Swedish language, the stated aims are to use language
for “thinking, communicating and learning” (National Agency of Education, 2011,
p. 211). In the introductory chapter of the Swedish curriculum, Lgr11, the school’s
mission in terms of language, literacy, identity and learning is summarised as follows:
Language, learning, and the development of a personal identity are all closely related. By
providing a wealth of opportunities for discussion, reading and writing, all pupils should
be able to develop their ability to communicate and thus enhance confidence in their own
language abilities (ibid., p. 11).
Lgr11 further states that “pupils should be able to keep their bearings in a complex
reality, where there is a vast flow of information where the rate of change is rapid”
(ibid. p. 11). Lgr11 underlines that teaching “should promote the pupil’s further learning and acquisition of knowledge based on pupil’s backgrounds, earlier experiences,
language and knowledge” (p. 10). A short description follows below of some of these
issues considering Elin and Hassan.
The families of Elin and Hassan live in the same town in Sweden. Elin’s family is
Swedish-speaking and her parents were born in the vicinity. Out of school, Elin meets
her friends and regularly plays TV and computer games. She also participates in social networks and visits different home pages on the Internet. “I love the computer”,
says Elin. She likes animals, especially horses and dogs, along with fashion. In Elin’s
rooms, in her two homes, there are many films, TV-games, posters of pop stars as well
as girls’ fashion and music magazines. Hassan’s family members speak Arabic and
Swedish. His parents were born in Syria. In his free time, Hassan meets his friends
and regularly plays TV and computer games as well as basketball and the guitar. In
Hassan’s room there are many films, posters and toys on the theme of Star Wars and
Harry Potter. “I am a Harry Potter nerd”, says Hassan. This is a brief summary of the
experiences and knowledge that Elin and Hassan bring to school.
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Access to texts out of school
In grade three Elin declares that she hates books. However, she does a great deal of
other reading; “messages on the mobile phone and the Go Super Model”. Every day
she sits in front of the computer and visits YouTube and the Go Super Model social
network. On the latter Elin answers and writes messages and shops, dresses her models
and plays games about fashion and modelling. She also plays some computer games
as well as TV motor racing games and a game called Singstar. Her favourite films
are Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory and The Bridge to Terabrika. According
to Elin, the boring thing with books is that “you are obliged to sit down and read line
after line, with lots of small words”. Despite this, Elin reads easily and happily when
she herself decides on the texts and also takes pleasure in writing her own stories. At
the end of grade three, she reads Love – How it Works (Jacquemot, 2006), which
she received as a gift from her stepmother. “It is useful to learn about such stuff”, Elin
says, and admits that this particular book is good. In grade three Hassan has seen all
the movies which by then had been released about Harry Potter; “the first, second,
third, fourth, fifth and sixth!” Hassan found the first film relatively scary, but then
watched it over and over again, after which “it became really great”. At home Hassan
has written a list with two columns for the good and the evil characters in the story
and on the back of a sheet of paper he has written all the magic spells used by Harry
Potter. At home Hassan also reads the comic magazine Donald Duck and plays TV
games such as Assassin, Harry Potter, Spiderman, Lego Star Wars and the PES 2010
football game. Now and then he browses through the commercial leaflet Evening at
home3 which provides an overview of the content of games and films. Reading is “OK”
says Hassan and shrugs his shoulders and then proudly adds that he reads “perfectly”.
Every week Elin and Hassan bring a reading assignment home from school. In grade
three Hassan takes home The Boy and the Tiger4 (Westman, 1986) and Elin Mini
and the Red Star (Hultgren & Nygren, 2008). In grade four Hassan brings two and
Elin three fiction novels as their weekly reading assignment.
Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu’s theories, Elin’s and Hassan’s experiences of, attitudes
to and habits concerning texts could be described as a habitus (Bourdieu, 1990, 1995).
From these experiences and habits an ongoing socialisation in relation to literacy
within different fields of education, spare time and civic life is taking place (Heller,
2008; Kramsch, 2008). In relation to Bourdieu’s theoretical perspectives, the uses
of literacy are always related to the individual’s symbolic capital, the expectations of
the environment and what is or is not possible to do within a certain field (Heller,
2008). In this way, education in the mother tongue as well as Swedish and Swedish
as a second language become discursive spaces where resources are produced and
distributed in, according to Monica Heller, a space where “actors are legitimized or
marginalized, consecrated or stigmatized” (p. 65). By means of long-running ethnographical studies, Shirley Brice Heath (1983) demonstrates how children’s lingual,
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social and cultural habitus is valued differently and how they therefore match the
expectations of school differently. Carina Fast (2007) in turn reveals that, in a Swedish
context, young children’s text-related experiences from popular culture, computer
use and the home environment are not always considered valuable in preschool and
school. Through the home environment and upbringing, habits and experiences are
formed and at the same time children and young people, to different extents, gain
access to literature, films, TV, and computer games. However, access does not automatically accomplish the use of or meaning making through any given medium as it
in turn depends on the habitus how and why to use it. In other words, through social
relationships and contacts, cultural conversance and trust in one’s own ability the
use of computers and literature becomes embedded in everyday life and therefore
creates different conditions for identity and meaning making.
At home Elin has access to films, TV and computer games, comics and girls’ magazines, books, papers, pens, her mother’s iPhone and one shared laptop, while Hassan
has access to films, TV and computer games, comics, magazines, his own iPhone and
one shared laptop. To master and participate in the Go Super Model social network,
like Elin does, and the TV and computer games that they both play, means that a
certain digital, social and cultural knowledge of these multimodal texts is developed,
but also that certain values and roles are offered. The visual information in these multimodal texts is massive and interwoven with the Swedish and English languages in
Go Super Model and in most cases mostly only with English in the TV and computer
games. Through the medium of film they, especially Hassan, both have experience
of narrative texts. By virtue of their respective families they have access to valuable
relationships with siblings, grandparents and so forth, where the Swedish language
in Elin’s case, and the Arabic language in Hassan’s, is incorporated. Access to the
written language used in official communicative contexts, like in this case Swedish,
is of great importance. However, in terms of identity making it is also important to
obtain access to the written form of one’s first language or languages as such access
is in itself a resource now and in the future. Arabic is one of the five most important
languages in the world, common to the whole Arabic world and spoken by more
than 280 million people. Hassan is gradually starting to break the code considering
Arabic sounds and letters. He has yet no access to the rich body of fiction and poetry
within the Arabic lingual world. Other meaningful and important social and cultural
practices that Elin and Hassan participate in when not at school are their respective
peer relationships and, in Hassan’s case, organised leisure activities. Hassan does
not have access to literature, factual books, newspapers and dictionaries at home. In
his room there are no books with two exceptions; one volume of verse and a book of
riddles for children, which he received as gifts from his earlier preschools. In contrast,
as mentioned, there are many films, TV and computer games.
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Access to texts in school
The text repertoire Elin and Hassan respectively encounter in grade three is dominated by the textbooks, Mini and the Red Star and The Boy and the Tiger. The text
repertoire mainly consists of teaching aids5 in grade four, connected to subjects on
the weekly curriculum. In connection with social and natural science, Elin and Hassan encounter texts from Country and Life (Rystedt et al., 1989) and Living History
(Hildingsson & Åsgård, 1990) among others. In the subject Swedish, the text repertoire consists of Words of the Week (Redin & Hydén, 1996), Language Grammar
(Schubert & Hydén, 2008) and Reading Comprehension (Hydén et al., 2002). As in
grade three, Elin and Hassan occasionally read novels, which they keep in their desk
at school and call “desk books”. Once a week, Elin and Hassan read another novel
in a peer group. These books are selected and ordered from the main town library
and constitute their weekly reading assignment. In his weekly lesson in Arabic, Hassan encounters a textbook containing letters, letter combinations, words and some
sentences. He also has a note book where he copies and writes down his weekly
assignment. In English, Elin and Hassan meet a textbook and an exercise book with
grammatical tasks. They also have a note book in which to write English words as their
weekly assignment. At school they experience and share texts in the form of television
news programmes and films about e.g. Swedish geography produced for educational
purposes. Sometimes websites are shared, such as maps and facts. Reading aloud
is another recurring literacy event and in grade four Elin and Hassan listen, among
others, to the story about the orphaned street child Alex Dogboy (Zak, 2008). The
above text repertoire which Elin and Hassan have access to in school is shared with
their classmates with one exception; the desk book. As for the rest, everyone reads
the same texts and variations reflect how much more someone reads and how much
less someone else reads.
The ‘choice’ of books that Elin and Hassan exert an influence on is hence the desk
book. In grade four, they and their classmates go twice to the nearby district library.
At this time, Elin’s attitude towards books is changing and she now finds them “so-so”,
commenting that they have become “better now”. After two months in fourth grade,
Elin has read many books. At home Elin reads An Unusual Horse (Adler, 2001),
which is about a girl who finds a brown horse. In school she reads Dangerous Visit
(Storck, 2008) and The House that Conjured with Time (Cederquist, 2009) among
others. In Hassan’s search for the ‘right’ book he gives the impression of a certain
groping for what I interpret as being familiar and well-known to him. In grade three
Hassan is searching for a Harry Potter book on several occasions. But they are hard
to find, especially since he wants to start with the first book and they are possibly also
a little too difficult for Hassan, something he is told on several occasions. Outer space
is also something that Hassan has encountered in the Star War films and TV games.
Hassan states that he “likes facts and space”, but immediately adds that “such books
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are not in the classroom, only if we go to the library”. “And Star Wars books, they
are impossible to find”, he concludes. During the library visit in grade four, Hassan
borrows “The Football Mystery” (Widermark, 2008), but still it does not seem to
be ‘right’. On a later occasion, Hassan himself goes to the school library to look for
another book, but finds the door closed. During the second and final library visit in
grade four, Hassan again looks for the first Harry Potter book, but cannot find it.
Instead, he finds the seventh book but is advised to choose an easier book. Hassan
then borrows The Pirate Princess (Brown, 2008). A few weeks later he takes Night
Guard (Wägner, 2006) from the pile of books in the classroom. At the same time, he
starts to read The Magic World of Harry Potter (Colbert, 2006), a book containing
the underlying myths, legends and facts about Harry Potter, the level and content
of which is beyond middle school years or similar. From Hassan’s perspective, his
groping can be seen as a search for books he has yet to find, but which could have been
part of his identity and meaning making and, in due course, created reading habits
concerning books. Elin, on the other hand, is now plunging through books mainly
about horses, animals, danger and mysteries. She is well on her way to creating and
developing a capital of experiences and reading habits related to fiction books – a
habitus which Hassan does not yet have to the same extent. While Elin and Hassan
both read different visual popular cultural texts on screen, Hassan still shrugs his
shoulders when it comes to novels while Elin has now become a fairly absorbed and
content reader of the latter.
Access to practices supporting literacy
Drawing on NLS (Barton, 1994; Gee, 1996; Heath, 1983; Street, 1984, 1993) and
the New London Group (1996) together with standpoints from the research field of
critical literacies (Comber & Simpson, 2001; Comber & Kamler, 2004; Comber &
Nixon, 2004; Janks, 2000, 2010; Vasquez, 2004) it is obvious how literacy means
and embodies advanced and various ways with a wide range of texts that are oral,
visual, audial, written and often appear multimodal. Brian Street (1984, 1993) gives
us a theoretical foundation for the establishment of critical literacies when making the
distinction between an autonomous and an ideological model. With the acceptance
that no literacies are neutral or fixed, what follows is the acceptance of texts from
different media and genres as well as other interpretations beyond that which is taken
for granted. The focus within a critical and democratic text work in education therefore concerns the repertoires of texts as well as the possibilities of the reconstruction
and design of texts.
In early 1990 Alan Luke together with Peter Freebody (Freebody & Luke, 1990)
presented the Four Resources Model with the ambition to move away from what they
claimed to be a too simplistic view of literacy. They later replaced the term “role” with
“family of practices” in order to accentuate how literacy functions as social practices
of texts. The repertoires that cooperate and co-exist in this family of practices are the
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coding, use, meaning-making and critiques of texts (Luke & Freebody, 1999). Breaking the code of texts includes alphabet, sounds, spelling and structural conventions
that constitute the more technical side of mastering a language. However, Luke and
Freebody also highlight what they name as “fundamental features and architecture”
(ibid., p. 4) which address how texts work as well as how syntax and style affect messages within them. To make meaning through texts covers both the understanding
and the composing of “meaningful written, visual, and spoken texts” (ibid.), where
Luke and Freebody emphasise how each text’s meaning system relates to the available
knowledge and experiences of “other cultural discourses, texts, and meaning systems”
(ibid.). The functional use of texts means the traverse and the labour around them
and further how these functions, in and out of school, “shape the way texts are structured” (ibid.). Finally, Luke and Freebody stress how possibilities of critical analysis
and transformations of texts are crucial since texts “represent particular points of
views while silencing others and influence people’s ideas” (ibid.). Texts “designs and
discourses can”, they conclude, “be critiqued and redesigned” (ibid.). These repertoires of literacy capabilities are, according to Luke and Freebody, “variously mixed
and variously orchestrated” (p. 5) in societies such as ours. Following this reasoning,
Janks explains reading as “an active process of bringing one’s own knowledge of culture, content, context, text use and text structure into an encounter with those of the
writer, in an active process of meaning making” (2010, p. 21). Based on the reasoning
of process, Kathy Hall (2003) stresses that children do not start with code cracking
and develop linearly through the four stages and only become critical text analysts
when automated decoding and reading comprehension are achieved. All four aspects
are relevant and essential from the start, but in different ways in various contexts.
Barbara Comber and Helen Nixon (2004) describe the Four Resources Model as a
critical literacy approach with a focus “not only on what children read and view, but
also on what they design, compose and produce across a range of genres, media and
modes” (p. 116). According to them, having access to design and re-design opens up
possibilities to shape and reshape one’s world through the use of literacy in a personal process of identity making. When arriving at the critical and transformative
analyses in the Four Resources Model, texts must be allowed to problematise as well
as negotiate. The consequences of the negotiation of texts are that they are possible
to question, deconstruct, change and rewrite (Comber & Simpson, 2001; Comber &
Nixon, 2004; Janks, 2010; Luke, 2000). One important issue here is the access to
dominant literacies in a society and what Janks, referring to Lodge (1997), names
the paradox of access:
If we provide students with access to dominant forms, this contributes to maintaining the
dominance of these forms. If, on the other hand, we deny students access, we perpetuate
their marginalization in a society that continues to recognize the value and importance of
these forms (2010, p. 24).
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Again, the question of power in relation to uses of languages and literacies as the
means of maintaining and reproducing relations of dominations in society arises.
However, it is important to bear in mind that power relations can mean both negative and productive forces (Foucault, 1978; Janks, 2000). The interesting question
is whose voices are being heard.
Elin and Hassan – once again
Elin has started to develop her own reading habits and experiences of books. Retrospectively, Hassan says that he does not find the story about the boy searching
for his cat Tiger all over Sweden “exciting”. The idea of linking a story about a boy
searching for his cat with Swedish geography does not seem to appeal to Hassan. He
also expresses that he found some words difficult:
…I did not understand that word……Lapp! But now I know. A guy who walks … … a Lapp is
when you … a guy who … no … I have forgotten.
The connection between places, memories and experiences that are part of every
human being’s life is also part of one’s own identity making. Stefan Jonsson (2005)
highlights how this question is also the fundamental question in a multicultural
society. Printed texts related to Hassan’s earlier experiences and interests probably
would be those with content near to Star Wars, basketball or Syria. Another text is,
of course, the one about Harry Potter. Hassan has not yet read or listened to anyone
reading the Harry Potter books, but he has memories, emotions and experiences of
all the times he has taken part of this story through the film and TV games.
When Elin and Hassan have worked with their reading assignments in grade
three they first had a short lesson where the new chapter was read aloud and words
explained and discussed. Afterwards, Elin and Hassan read the same text individually and answered questions about the content in written form. This involved
using complete sentences, correct spelling, neat hand writing and improving after
feedback from a teacher. The textbook was taken home and the same text was read
for homework by the following week. This is the background against which Hassan
proudly states that he can read well and that he does it “perfectly” and Elin, in turn,
that she “hates to read”. When listening to the teacher’s reading aloud from Alex
Dogboy and other stories, questions about the content are rarely posed. In the weekly
Arabic lesson, Hassan works with sounds and letters and written single words and
sentences with no connection to the rest of the school work or his personal experiences. Storytelling and/or reading aloud does not form a part of the Arabic lessons.
Several times a week in grade four, Elin and Hassan individually work with Reading
Comprehension (Hydén et al., 2002), which contains 22 texts from different genres
divided on one page each and with following comprehension questions on the next.
In the first category of questions the answers can be found directly in the text. In the
next category, the answers can still be found in the text but Elin and Hassan have to
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use clues and be able to draw their own conclusions. In the third and final category
of questions, Elin and Hassan have to use their experience to imagine and reflect
on different situations and dilemmas. They work independently with the questions
and write the answers individually. There is no interaction or dialogue in relation to
the questions and answers. When Elin and Hassan read the same fiction book with
other peers once a week in grade four, they take turns reading until summoned to
class again. With the introduction of more subjects and the increasing text volume
in grade four, it becomes more and more obvious that Hassan does not understand
the meaning of all the words, or the content of the texts he reads. The twelve words
of the week that Elin and Hassan have as homework each week are merely intended
as a spelling exercise, and not put into any context. Almost every week both Elin and
Hassan obtain full marks. Now and then Hassan asks about the meaning of unfamiliar
words. Before starting on a new task he often requests instructions. His main strategy
is to ensure that he does not make a mistake. He is therefore eager to write (spell) and
read (decode) correctly. For Elin, reading books implies understanding and she is
truly absorbed by some books but also irritated by the “boring stuff”, as she expresses
it, in Words of the Week and Language Grammar. Elin and Hassan also produce a
couple of texts in different genres; a descriptive text about themselves, a school trip,
the summer holidays and a few factual texts about Swedish animals and provinces.
Out of school Elin and Hassan read their weekly assignment. Elin is by now devouring books, at times some magazines for girls as well as the content of Go Super Model
on a daily basis. “It is such fun to shop, get money, play and such things”, says Elin.
At home Hassan reads Evening at Home, Donald Duck and the printed and audio
text of TV and computer games. Hassan is truly fascinated with the battle between
good and evil in Harry Potter as well as Star Wars. “They have different tasks to do”,
explains Hassan and goes on talking about laser swords and Princess Leila.
Access and design in literacy education
In school Elin and Hassan mainly work individually with their textbook, exercise books
and text production. Dialogue and interaction about the content of texts rarely occur.
The syllabus for Swedish in Lgr11 states that pupils, based on their own experiences
in grade six, should be able to interpret texts (National Agency for Education, 2011,
pp. 216-218). Elin and Hassan are not used to this kind of reasoning. The literacy
education to which they have access strongly supports practices for coding. There
is a vast gap between more traditional school work, such as spelling and grammar,
and make meaning from and comprehending texts from different genres, content
and media. Hassan, in particular, does not yet have a habitus gained from literature,
experiences of reading books, or library visits with which to fill this empty space. The
text resources distributed in schools are limited and can, I believe, be expanded in
many ways. It is somehow implicitly understood that the ‘desk book’ has to be a work
of fiction. In the piles of books in the classroom there are no factual books about Star
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Wars, TV games or horses; there are no factual books at all. The text repertoire Elin
and Hassan encounter in school needs to be widened in terms of quantity as well as
quality. The selection and choices of texts comes before and is the fundament of an
education supporting effective literacy as described in the Four Resources Model.
Narrative imagination needs a seedbed of texts that are familiar and that touch and
concern Elin, Hassan and other pupils. The places for selection and choices of texts
are therefore a crucial moment which must be based upon a relational understanding
and provide support in different ways for different pupils which can mean book talks
for a whole class or a group or a one-to-one respectful talk about what book Hassan
would like to read or not. Children’s text-based experiences out of school must here
be seen as valuable and, indeed, crucial clues. In a school with democratic ambitions
it is fundamental that the focus is on children’s possibilities for development. Then the
starting point for the planning of education must be the experiences and knowledge
that individual students have and bring to school. To narrow down experiences and
differences into one shared textbook can therefore be devastating. Access to a broad
text repertoire with possibilities of recognitions for Elin, Hassan and other pupils can
therefore be said to be the very foundation of literacy education.
Likewise, literacy education must mean more dialogue and interaction that, except
for coding, also support the use of texts, meaning making through texts as well as the
critique of texts, which also touches upon the production of texts. A familiar textbook
can contain pages of memories and places that give strength to and support Elin and
Hassan’s meaning and identity making. They can also contain instructions and reviews of TV games, films, computer games and social networks which they both have
experiences of. The latter are well-known media to Elin and Hassan, but they have
never used these texts in school. Hassan in particular moves between them, which
offers an opportunity to bridge the gap. Within the same content, Hassan could reach
deeper and gain access to all the repertoires of the Four Resources Model. Overall,
this places high demands on a flexible, effective and goal-oriented education that at
the same time is sensitive and relational. How can interaction be established around
shared reading experiences, like the authentic and gripping story about Alex Dogboy,
and how can individual reading experiences be met, shared and organised? Considering the specific exercise book in reading comprehension, the question is instead why
these texts are used not at all dialogically? Out of school, just around the corner, a
wide range of oral, visual and written texts is accessible. Further, a burning issue is
how to wisely and respectfully integrate those multimodal childhood texts in literacy
education without the risk of colonialism or banning.
Whatever the answers might be, they have to involve a democratic text work with
a broad repertoire and possibilities to participate within the Four Resources Model.
This means focusing not only on what children read and view but also on what they
do with it in terms of design. The possibilities for re-reading and re-writing, for trying out new alternatives as well as ways being and above all sharing this with others
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in a respectful manner need to be taken into account. It is in the clashes of different
experiences that language, literacy and motivation grow and develop. Otherwise,
in the worst case scenario, education in the mother tongue as well as Swedish and
Swedish as a second language risks becoming a social space where some pupils are
marginalised instead of having their experiences legitimised.
Conclusion
We read, interpret and comprehend texts from our own surrounding world and experiences. A crucial question now and in the future is: How can literacy teaching and
instruction create joy and wonder so that children like Elin and Hassan want to read
and enjoy reading books as well as other texts, thus obtaining access to strategies
that enable them to sift, analyse, interpret and comprehend all sorts of messages,
stories and information in a variety of media and genres? The empirical material
presented here makes it clear that the individualistic approach has to be opened and
widened by a more dialogical one, something that has been previously highlighted
(Liberg, 2003; Liberg, 2010). In a report written by the Swedish school inspectorate
(National Agency of Education, 2010), the importance of drawing on pupils’ varying
experiences in order to establish equal education in Swedish as a second language is,
again, stressed. Literacy education also means identity making and places and spaces
are needed for this work in school. According to my understanding of the theorists
and the voices of critical literacies mentioned in this article, it is fundamental to
have access to practices that support the use of texts in different genres, modes and
discourses. However, it is equally essential to have access to practices for functional
meaningful uses through negotiation and transformation in different cultural and
social dimensions. Literacy education can hence mean an awareness that texts are
always constructed and that the following questions need to be posed: Whose voices
are heard? and Who is empowered or disempowered by the language used? These are
questions that in turn can be followed by the process of identifying, naming, recognising, deconstructing and reconstructing, what Janks (2010) calls the redesign cycle
(see p. 183) and what I interpret as participation in the repertoires of texts within the
Four Resources Model, thus supporting effective literacy capabilities. The paradox of
access to dominant forms of literacy as well as new alternative ones is not, I argue, a
question of either-or, but the complex core of a dialogical, dialectical and democratic
literacy education where the possibilities of design in order to re-write and re-read
the world are necessary and crucial.
Catarina Schmidt is a PhD Candidate in pedagogy within the national research school LIMCUL at
Örebro University. Her research interests include literacy in multilingual, informal and educational
settings through different media and genres in relation to identity- and meaning making.
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Catarina Schmidt
Notes
1
Text is viewed in this article as a wide concept including oral as well as visual texts and print on screen and paper.
2
The Swedish national research school, LIMCUL, focusses on young people’s literacies, multilingualism and cultural practices in present day society. LIMCUL is financed by the Swedish Research Council, while Örebro University, www.oru.se, is
the host of the research school. More information about the specific research project which this article is based upon can be
found at http://www.oru.se/humus/catarina_schmidt
3
Translated by the author; Hemmakväll in Swedish.
4
The title of the textbook readers “The Boy and the Tiger” and “Mini and the Red Star” are translated from Swedish to
English by the author. See the list of references for the Swedish title.
5
The titles of the teaching aids are all translated from Swedish to English by the author. See the list of references for the
Swedish title.
312
The question of access and design
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