ABSTRACT

Through analysis of case studies of young children (ages 3 to 8 years), situated in different geographic, cultural, linguistic, political, and socioeconomic sites on six continents, this book examines the interplay of childhoods, schooling, and, literacies. Written language is situated within particular childhoods as they unfold in school. A key focus is on children’s agency in the construction of their own childhoods.

The book generates diverse perspectives on what written language may mean for childhoods. Looking at variations in the complex relationships between official (curricular) visions and unofficial (child-initiated) visions of relevant composing practices and appropriate cultural resources, it offers, first, insight into how those relationships may change over time and space as children move through early schooling, and, second, understanding of the dynamics of schools and the experience of childhoods through which the local meaning of school literacy is formulated. Each case—each child in a particular sociocultural site—does not represent an essentialized nation or a people but, rather, a rich, processual depiction of childhood being constructed in particular local contexts and the role, if any, for composing.

part Section 1|115 pages

Stories of Composing in Childhoods

chapter 2|101 pages

The Situated Cases

Child Agency, Cultural Resources, Language

part Section 2|47 pages

Thematic Threads of Continuity and Contrast

chapter 3|14 pages

The Relevance of Composing

Children's Spaces for Social Agency

chapter 5|15 pages

The Powers of Language

Toward Remixing Language Policy, Curricula, and Child Identities

part Section 3|23 pages

On Composing Childhoods

chapter 6|13 pages

Making Space for Missing Childhoods

Implications for Theory, Policy, and Pedagogy