At Play in the Space: The concept of 'the social practice approach' in the Scottish adult literacies field

This paper focuses on Scotland’s policy response to the International Adult Literacy Survey (1994-1998) and the ‘grand experiment’ (Merrifield 2005) to implement a social practices perspective of literacies.This radical perspective, derived from the New Literacy Studies (NLS), has profound implicati...

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Main Author: Aileen Ackland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2013-06-01
Series:Literacy and Numeracy Studies
Online Access:https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/lnj/article/view/3330
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spelling doaj-44eaec7aef8c44f0906bc229cc7786a52020-11-24T21:39:49ZengUTS ePRESSLiteracy and Numeracy Studies1441-05591839-29032013-06-0121110.5130/lns.v21i1.33302146At Play in the Space: The concept of 'the social practice approach' in the Scottish adult literacies fieldAileen Ackland0University of AberdeenThis paper focuses on Scotland’s policy response to the International Adult Literacy Survey (1994-1998) and the ‘grand experiment’ (Merrifield 2005) to implement a social practices perspective of literacies.This radical perspective, derived from the New Literacy Studies (NLS), has profound implications for pedagogy and is promoted in Scotland as ‘the social practice approach’. The paper begins with a discussion of the distinctive developments in Scottish policy in the context of the international interest in Adult Literacy. The rhetorical claims made in Scotland are then examined through a study which used a methodology drawn from Personal Construct Theory (PCT) to explore how practitioners understand ‘the social practice approach’. This research found little connection between the theoretical concepts of the New Literacy Studies and practitioners’ interpretations. Dissonances in the data highlighted power issues between policy and practice.In the latter part of the paper, Bernstein’s (2000) ideas about how theoretical knowledge is translated into pedagogical knowledge are used to explore the dissonances further.The paper concludes that there is an ideological conflict of purpose within the discourses of adult literacies in Scotland and that the critical pedagogy implied by the New Literacy Studies is also necessary within teacher education if practice is to be transformed in response to the radical social theory. https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/lnj/article/view/3330
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aileen Ackland
spellingShingle Aileen Ackland
At Play in the Space: The concept of 'the social practice approach' in the Scottish adult literacies field
Literacy and Numeracy Studies
author_facet Aileen Ackland
author_sort Aileen Ackland
title At Play in the Space: The concept of 'the social practice approach' in the Scottish adult literacies field
title_short At Play in the Space: The concept of 'the social practice approach' in the Scottish adult literacies field
title_full At Play in the Space: The concept of 'the social practice approach' in the Scottish adult literacies field
title_fullStr At Play in the Space: The concept of 'the social practice approach' in the Scottish adult literacies field
title_full_unstemmed At Play in the Space: The concept of 'the social practice approach' in the Scottish adult literacies field
title_sort at play in the space: the concept of 'the social practice approach' in the scottish adult literacies field
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Literacy and Numeracy Studies
issn 1441-0559
1839-2903
publishDate 2013-06-01
description This paper focuses on Scotland’s policy response to the International Adult Literacy Survey (1994-1998) and the ‘grand experiment’ (Merrifield 2005) to implement a social practices perspective of literacies.This radical perspective, derived from the New Literacy Studies (NLS), has profound implications for pedagogy and is promoted in Scotland as ‘the social practice approach’. The paper begins with a discussion of the distinctive developments in Scottish policy in the context of the international interest in Adult Literacy. The rhetorical claims made in Scotland are then examined through a study which used a methodology drawn from Personal Construct Theory (PCT) to explore how practitioners understand ‘the social practice approach’. This research found little connection between the theoretical concepts of the New Literacy Studies and practitioners’ interpretations. Dissonances in the data highlighted power issues between policy and practice.In the latter part of the paper, Bernstein’s (2000) ideas about how theoretical knowledge is translated into pedagogical knowledge are used to explore the dissonances further.The paper concludes that there is an ideological conflict of purpose within the discourses of adult literacies in Scotland and that the critical pedagogy implied by the New Literacy Studies is also necessary within teacher education if practice is to be transformed in response to the radical social theory.
url https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/lnj/article/view/3330
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