ABSTRACT

This unique and visionary text is a compilation of fascinating studies conducted in a variety of cross-cultural settings where children learn language and literacy with siblings, grandparents, peers and community members. Focusing on the knowledge and skills of children often invisible to educators, these illuminating studies highlight how children skilfully draw from their varied cultural and linguistic worlds to make sense of new experiences.

The vastly experienced team of contributors provide powerful demonstrations of the generative activity of young children and their mediating partners - family members, peers, and community members - as they syncretise languages, literacies and cultural practices from varied contexts.

Through studies grounded in home, school, community school, nursery and church settings, we see how children create for themselves radical forms of teaching and learning in ways that are not typically recognised, understood or valued in schools.

This book will be invaluable reading for teachers, teacher educators, researchers and policy-makers who seek to understand the many pathways to literacy and use that knowledge to affect real change in schools.

part |68 pages

The family context

chapter |15 pages

Mediating networks for literacy learning

The role of Puerto Rican siblings

chapter |12 pages

Samia and Sadaqat play school

Early bilingual literacy at home

chapter |14 pages

“Right, get your book bags!”

Siblings playing school in multiethnic London

chapter |11 pages

Buzz Lightyear in the nursery

Intergenerational literacy learning in a multimedia age

chapter |12 pages

Storytelling and Latino elders

What can children learn?

part |65 pages

Friends as teachers

chapter |12 pages

Making a place for peer interaction

Mexican American kindergarteners learning language and literacy

chapter |12 pages

‘How do I read these words?'

Bilingual exchange teaching between Cantonese-speaking peers

chapter |13 pages

Friendship literacy

Young children as cultural and linguistic experts

chapter |12 pages

Learning to be just

Interactions of White working-class peers

part |66 pages

Learning in community settings

chapter |5 pages

Many pathways

Implications of Syncretic Literacy Studies for practice and research