Talk, text and technology: literacy and social practice in a remote indigenous community
In: Critical language and literacy studies 14
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In: Critical language and literacy studies 14
In: Learning, culture and social interaction, Band 15, S. 31-43
ISSN: 2210-6561
"This work offers us the rare opportunity to step inside innovative uses of technologies, mergers of global technologies into local knowledge, and community advocacy of local history and ideology…The young people who move through these pages are motivated and proud of having had the opportunities that make possible their linking together of historical knowledge and contemporary means of communication and performance. The means illustrated here have enabled them to develop skills that will help them move into the future as adults engaged with the health and life of their own communities, connected to their language and culture as their way of being in the world of the local so as to know the world of the global." Professor Shirley Brice Heath
Stanford University, USA
Preliminary pages -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. THE LEARNING SPACES -- 3. LEARNING SPACES FROM THE LOCAL TO THE GLOBAL -- 4. DESIGN PRINCIPLES FOR INDIGENOUS LEARNING SPACES -- 5. YOUTH LITERACY AND LEARNING SPACES -- APPENDIX 1. Relevant weblinks -- APPENDIX 2. Language and literacy strategies to support ICT and digital media activities -- Suggestions for further reading -- References -- Index.
In: Learning, culture and social interaction, Band 2, Heft 4, S. 227-237
ISSN: 2210-6561
'In the Time of their Lives is a wonderful book that honours the extraordinary heritage and historical trajectory of Western Desert (Ngaanyatjarra) speech, the importance of speech and the management of its varieties with a complexity and insight we have rarely seen in print. With a blend of interviews in translation, close examples of speech, first person testimony, photographs, film clips and historical material, Kral and Ellis have brought attention to the changing sensory world of Yarnangu, of sight sound and bodily experience as central to Ngaanyatjarra sociality and personhood. It is rare, indeed, to have such respectful research flow from the intimate and personal perspective of a committed member and active participant in Ngaanyatjarra life.' - Fred Myers, Silver Professor of Anthropology, New York University
In: Research on children and social interaction: RCSI, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 164-198
ISSN: 2057-5815
In the Ngaanyatjarra Lands in remote Western Australia children play a guessing game called mama mama ngunytju ngunytju 'father father mother mother'. It is mainly girls who play the game, along with other members of their social network, including age-mates, older kin and adults. They offer clues about target referents and establish mutual understandings through multimodal forms of representation that include semi-conventionalized drawings on the sand. In this paper we show how speech, gesture, and graphic schemata are negotiated and identify several recurrent themes, particularly focusing on the domains of kinship and spatial awareness. We discuss the implications this case study has for understanding the changing nature of language socialization in remote Indigenous Australia. Multimodal analyses of games and other indirect teaching routines deepen our understandings of the acquisition of cultural knowledge and the development of communicative competence in this context.