Abstract
Based on data from a ten-year study of literacy and linguistic diversity in the classroom, in this article we examine the intersection of investment and placemaking through an analysis of a student’s emergent engagement practices in a teaching unit about writing blogs. Drawing on recent work on spatiality in literacy studies, we trace the evolving movements in the student’s changing relationship with the classroom as a literacy learning place. Our analysis shows how the shifting relationships between the human beings, the classroom objects and the various semiotic resources create a learning place that allows the student to explore the possibilities for entangling herself in the text-making process through embodied and affective engagements in the text classroom practices. Based on this analysis, we suggest a parallel shift of emphasis from a focus of located investment toward a focus on placemaking practices of engagement in order to capture the unpredictable and affectively loaded bubbles of becomings that are part of all classroom practices.
| Originalsprog | Engelsk |
|---|---|
| Tidsskrift | Language and Education |
| Vol/bind | 34 |
| Udgave nummer | 6 |
| Sider (fra-til) | 566-582 |
| Antal sider | 17 |
| ISSN | 0950-0782 |
| DOI | |
| Status | Udgivet - 2020 |