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McGill-Franzen, Anne; Lanford, Cynthia; Adams, Ellen – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2002
Using naturalistic inquiry and case study contrasts, finds variation in literacy support available to children. In income-eligible preschools, curricula and pedagogy reflected a limited view of children as learners. Argues that poor children and children of color are socialized to practice a different literacy, one that offers limited experiences…
Descriptors: Literacy, Outcomes of Education, Preschool Children, Preschool Education
Egan-Robertson, Ann – 1998
This paper stems from a study of an eighth-grade writing club in an urban school. The study asked: How would students use a community-based set of texts to create identities for themselves and each other in relation to their communities, their schooling, and writing and to examine issues of personhood? The paper theorizes about what the notions of…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Community Problems, Cultural Context, Discourse Communities
McPhail, Irving P. – 1979
Perhaps the most controversial and provocative issue in the discussion of reading failure in inner-city schools has been the relationship between Black English Vernacular (BEV), reading failure, and reading instruction. The debate has focused on the degree to which BEV does or does not interfere with the acquisition of reading/language arts…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Classroom Communication, Communication Problems
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McPhail, Irving P. – Reading World, 1982
Contains an assessment of the inner-city literacy crisis, a critique of rationales for reading failure based on "deficit" and "difference" type ideologies, a call for the study of successful inner-city schools, an evaluation of G. Weber's study of successful inner-city schools, and the development of an urban literacy agenda. (FL)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Black Youth, Elementary Education, Leadership
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Lee, Carol D. – Journal of Negro Education, 1991
Using the example of the African-American community and its own distinctive voice, argues that schools can draw upon routine practices within the cultural life of communities to enhance the literature students' skills. This paper explores "signifying" and links between literature and talk in the African-American community. (JB)
Descriptors: Audiolingual Skills, Black Community, Black Culture, Black Dialects