Call for Papers Special Edition: Australian Journal of Adult Learning Power, policies, and practices in adult literacies
This Special Issue of the Australian Journal of Adult Learning (AJAL) will explore various trends developing at the forefront of literacies in adult education, to consider ways that literacies are being defined and enacted in current times in research and practice.
We encourage submissions from around the globe about literacies that relate to these four fields:
- Critical literacy;
- New literacy studie;
- Multiliteracies;
- Sociocultural approaches to additional language learning in adult education.
Each of these four areas of literacies draw attention to ways in which power continues to shape and impact adult learning experiences. Critical literacy may draw upon a Freirian analysis or the Frankfurt school of critical theory, which examines power relations through concepts such as ideological critique, that question the underlying assumptions of power structures often embedded in dominant discourses. Critical literacies may also consider a range of access and inclusion issues, looking at factors such as gender, Indigeneity, ability, age, race, culture, and/or social class.
In this ongoing epistemological shift, New Literacy Studies has significantly advanced our understanding of the larger societal implications of Web 2.0 technologies: “In a world where electronically produced text carries meaning, exclusion from digital technologies can have disempowering consequences – especially for life in the home, community and workplace” (Hamilton, Tett, & Crowther, 2012, p. 4).
Multiliteracies, like New Literacy Studies, acknowledge the power dynamics of literacies to shape identities and technological advances. Multiliteracies focus on deepening and expanding forms of communication through multimodality and cultural diversity (Kalantzis et al., 2016). The broader concept of literacies also undergirds sociocultural approaches to additional language learning, which recognise the need to affirm multilingual students’ identities in the face of coercive societal power relations that devalue Culturally and Linguistically Diverse learners’ home cultures and languages (Cummins, 2021).
Proposals for the following types of papers that address literacies in adult learning will be considered:
- Advancing theoretical discourses on literacy;
- Disseminating new research on literacy;
- Critiquing Human Capital Theory approaches to literacy policies;
- Reporting on literacy programs or stories of practice teaching literacy (from practitioners in the field).
Types of contributions welcome:
Abstracts should be 300-500 words (excluding references) to be sent directly to the Guest Editors to their email address (please see email addresses below)
Academic papers of 6000 to 6,500 words in length including references, tables, data and figures will be blind double, external peer reviewed to be submitted via the AJAL portal.
Stories of practice of up to 3,000 words in length including references, tables, data and figures will be reviewed by editors to be submitted via the AJAL portal.
AJAL submission and author guidelines:
https://www.ajal.net.au/peerreview/index.php/ajal/about/submissions
For furher information, please see the full Call featured below and attached.
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