Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6845896 Linguistics and Education 2018 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
At the end of the fall semester, a fight broke out at a high school in the southeastern United States, a fight large enough to be covered by the local news. In this article, we analyze two data sources related to this event: one local news report and a discussion of that news report that occurred in an Intensive Reading class at the school. Intensive Reading was a remedial course designed for students who had failed a required standardized literacy assessment. In this article, we draw upon discourse analysis and critical race media literacy to argue the following: 1) the local media representation presented a version of events that used coded language and visual images to create a figured world in which students of color were silenced and a master script was perpetuated; and 2) students, having been taught critical literacy (in the form of multiliteracies pedagogy) and media literacy, resisted the media representation and constructed a counter-story based on their own figured worlds. Our analysis also supports the call for critical race media literacy pedagogy in schools.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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