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Chapter 4: Authentic Literacy Pedagogy

Supporting Material

Dimension 1: The Contents of Literacy Knowledge—Authentic Meanings

Parry and Hornsby on Conference Writing

Dwyer on Process-Conference Writing

Walshe on Individualised Reading and Writing

Dewey on Progressive Education

Dimension 2: The Organisation of Literacy Curriculum—Process Pedagogy and Natural Language Growth

Maria Montessori on Free, Natural Education

Montessori on Grammar

Debra Goodman’s Class

Goodman on Whole Language

Graves on the Craft of Writing

Dimension 3: Learners Doing Literacy—Active Learning and Experiential Immersion

Montessori on Handwriting

Graves on Handwriting

Goodman on the Construction of Meaning in Reading

Graves on Testing Reading and Writing

Hayes and Bahruth on Reading to Write

Walshe on The Role of the Teacher

Boomer and Davis on Co-operative Writing

Blackburn and Powell on Individualised Instruction

Delpit on Power and Pedagogy

Kalantzis and Cope, Debating Authentic Pedagogy

Further Reading


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  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1: Literacies on a Human Scale
  • Chapter 2: Literacies’ Purposes
  • Chapter 3: Didactic Literacy Pedagogy
  • Chapter 4: Authentic Literacy Pedagogy
  • Chapter 5: Functional Literacy Pedagogy
  • Chapter 6: Critical Literacy Pedagogy
  • Chapter 7: Literacies as Multimodal Designs for Meaning
  • Chapter 8: Making Written Meanings
  • Chapter 9: Making Visual Meanings
  • Chapter 10: Making Spatial, Tactile and Gestural Meanings
  • Chapter 11: Making Audio and Oral Meanings
  • Chapter 12: Literacies to Think and To Learn
  • Chapter 13: Literacies Pedagogy
  • Chapter 14: Literacies and Learner Differences
  • Chapter 15: Literacies Standards and Assessment
  • Keywords


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Copyright © 2011, Mary Kalantzis and Bill Cope.