ABSTRACT

The nature of literacy is an issue of global debate. When the National Literacy Strategy [NLS] was introduced into UK schools it was arguably the most ambitious educational reform programme in the world, and the controversy necessarily intensified. How can the impact of such reforms be assessed?

In its ten year history the NLS affected every primary and secondary teacher in the country and, therefore, every child. The initiative provoked a widespread recognition of the importance of literacy for all children and attracted the attention of many other governments. This book is the first definitive and objective review and evaluation of the impact of these literacy reforms. With contributions from the most respected experts on literacy and English from the UK and from across the world, this unprecedented critical examination explores:

  • How teaching policy and practice were impacted by the reforms
  • How the NLS came into being, how it was operated, what it did and did not achieve
  • What we can learn from its successes and failures
  • The most important aspects of the reforms, from policing grammar to the impact of ‘The Literacy Game’ and ‘informed prescription’ on teaching.

Whether you are a policy maker or classroom teacher, this book is an invaluable resource to anyone concerned about literacy. It provides readers from around the world with a genuine and evidence-based perspective on this immense initiative, lucidly evaluating the lessons learned from both its ambitions and its failures.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

‘Informed Prescription' or ‘Deformed Restriction’?

chapter |19 pages

Beyond The Heuristic of Suspicion

The Value of Media Literacy

chapter |18 pages

Policing Grammar

The Place of Grammar in Literacy Policy

chapter |19 pages

New Zealand's Literacy Strategy

A Lengthening Tail and Wagging Dogs

chapter |11 pages

NLS1 and NLS2

Implications of a Social Literacies Perspective for Policies and Practices of Literacy Education

chapter |19 pages

The Impact of the Framework for English

Teachers' Struggle Against ‘Informed Prescription'

chapter |21 pages

The Great Literacy Debate as Makeover Television

Notes on Genre Proliferation