Reading the Nation: Migration as a Generative Theme

Paulo Freire, a foundational figure in field of literacy, introduced the idea that reading the word always also involves reading the world (Freire & Macedo, 2005). In Freire’s work in adult education, “reading the world” was often accomplished through the use of generative themes, in which the w...

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Main Author: Leah Durán
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Worlds of Words: Center of Global Literacies and Literatures 2024-09-01
Series:WOW Stories
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Online Access:https://wowlit.org/on-line-publications/stories/xi-2/3/
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author Leah Durán
author_facet Leah Durán
author_sort Leah Durán
collection DOAJ
description Paulo Freire, a foundational figure in field of literacy, introduced the idea that reading the word always also involves reading the world (Freire & Macedo, 2005). In Freire’s work in adult education, “reading the world” was often accomplished through the use of generative themes, in which the words that students first learned were based on important aspects of their social, cultural and political worlds. These topics or themes were characterized as “generative” in that they contained the possibility not only for learning to read and write but also for thinking critically and expansively about the structures of their everyday lives. In this article, I draw on this concept to show how migration served as a generative theme for our work with teachers in a two-week NEH Summer Institute for K-12 teachers.
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spelling doaj-art-b14387d79d4e49f6b0dd791d069aa4a72025-08-20T03:42:15ZengWorlds of Words: Center of Global Literacies and LiteraturesWOW Stories2577-05512024-09-01XI21115Reading the Nation: Migration as a Generative ThemeLeah Durán0University of Arizona, Tucson, ArizonaPaulo Freire, a foundational figure in field of literacy, introduced the idea that reading the word always also involves reading the world (Freire & Macedo, 2005). In Freire’s work in adult education, “reading the world” was often accomplished through the use of generative themes, in which the words that students first learned were based on important aspects of their social, cultural and political worlds. These topics or themes were characterized as “generative” in that they contained the possibility not only for learning to read and write but also for thinking critically and expansively about the structures of their everyday lives. In this article, I draw on this concept to show how migration served as a generative theme for our work with teachers in a two-week NEH Summer Institute for K-12 teachers. https://wowlit.org/on-line-publications/stories/xi-2/3/educationteachingliteracy communityhuman migration
spellingShingle Leah Durán
Reading the Nation: Migration as a Generative Theme
WOW Stories
education
teaching
literacy community
human migration
title Reading the Nation: Migration as a Generative Theme
title_full Reading the Nation: Migration as a Generative Theme
title_fullStr Reading the Nation: Migration as a Generative Theme
title_full_unstemmed Reading the Nation: Migration as a Generative Theme
title_short Reading the Nation: Migration as a Generative Theme
title_sort reading the nation migration as a generative theme
topic education
teaching
literacy community
human migration
url https://wowlit.org/on-line-publications/stories/xi-2/3/
work_keys_str_mv AT leahduran readingthenationmigrationasagenerativetheme