ABSTRACT

Centered around the idea that literacy teaching is more than the transmission of strategies and skills, this volume serves as a foundation for approaching literacy from an identity perspective. Through incisive and accessible chapters from top scholars, it introduces readers to the concept of literate identities, examining them across ages and grade levels to present an overview of how scholars and educators can use this concept in their research and teaching.

Organized by developmental level with sections on early childhood, middle childhood, adolescence, and cross-age research, contributors reveal how literacy can be framed as an identity practice to engage students and support their development. Applying a range of theoretical perspectives and frameworks, each chapter identifies the identity theory used, explains the relevant methodology and research questions, covers implications for practice, and includes questions or prompts for discussion. The volume reveals how understanding literate identities is at the heart of effective and inclusive literacy instruction by addressing key topics, including culturally relevant pedagogy, intersectionality, and transnationalism, among others. Illuminating multiple pathways to understanding students as readers and writers, this book is essential for teachers, scholars, and researchers in literacy education, research methods, and multicultural education.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Approaching Literacy from an Identity Perspective

part Section II|54 pages

Literate Identities in Middle Childhood

chapter 4|16 pages

A Sociocultural Approach to School Literacy

Navigating Identity Through Culturally Relevant Pedagogy

chapter 6|14 pages

“They Will Shut You Out If They Think You Can't Read”

Navigating Diverse Models of Identity in an Eighth-Grade Classroom

part Section III|58 pages

Literate Identities in Adolescence

chapter 7|18 pages

How Youth Construct Literacy-Related Identities

The Role of Tracking and High-Stakes Testing

chapter 9|15 pages

“Learning to Code … with a Goal that I Get to Determine”

A Latina Girl's Literate Intersectional Identities at a STEAM Workshop

part Section IV|66 pages

Literate Identities Across Childhood and Adolescence

chapter 10|17 pages

Longitudinal Identity Construction

Intersectionality, Figured Worlds, and Assemblage

chapter 11|15 pages

Becoming (Un)Labeled

Challenging Socially Constructed Notions of Normalcy in Literate Identities

chapter 12|15 pages

Literate Identities and/in the Body

Tracing Embodiments of Literacy Across Grade Levels

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion

Advancing Identity in the Literacy Field