ABSTRACT

Reconceptualizing Curriculum, Literacy, and Learning for School-Age Mothers offers a portrait of classroom literacy practices and learning opportunities that are provided for school-age mothers in two different schools. Through a series of case studies of school sites, teachers, and students, this book presents evidence of how these at-risk students use literacy in complex ways in the classroom and in their everyday lives. Attuned to the struggle for school-age mothers’ access to meaningful and challenging curriculum in public schools, as well as to the relative dearth of scholarly research on the topic, this volume demonstrates how educators can rethink the issue of schooling for this population of students.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

The Education of School-Age Mothers in the United States

chapter 1|21 pages

Public Noise around School-Age Motherhood

chapter 3|15 pages

Reading with Their Bodies

Motherhood as a Reader Stance

chapter 4|13 pages

Rhetoric of the Future

Writing as a Site for Identity-Making

chapter 5|23 pages

More Than Mothers

Classroom Talk and the Negotiation of Relationships

chapter 6|21 pages

Schooling School-Age Mothers

Motherhood as a Curricular Theme