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E-grāmata: Literacies in Times of Disruption: Living and Learning During a Pandemic

(University of Louisville)
  • Formāts: 238 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Jun-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040049945
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  • Formāts: 238 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Jun-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040049945

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"The wide-ranging disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic altered the experiences of place, technology, time, and school for students. This book explores how students' responses to these extraordinary times shaped their identities as learners and writers, as well as their perceptions of education. This book traces the voices of a diverse group of university students, from first-year to doctoral students, over the first two years of the pandemic. Students discussed the effects of having their homes forced toserve as classrooms, work, and living spaces, as they also navigated much of school and life through their digital screens. The affective and embodied experiences of this disruption and uncertainty, and the memories and narratives constructed from those experiences, challenged and remade students' relationships with place, digital media, and school itself. Understanding students' perceptions of these times has implications for imagining innovative and empathetic approaches to literacy and learning going forward. In a time when disruptions, including but not limited to the pandemic, continue to ripple and resonate through education and culture, this book provides important insights for researchers and teachers in literacy and writing studies, education, media studies, and any seeking a better understanding of students and learning in this precarious age"--

The wide-ranging disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic altered the experiences of place, technology, time, and school for students. This book explores how students’ responses to these extraordinary times shaped their identities as learners and writers, as well as their perceptions of education.



The wide-ranging disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic altered the experiences of place, technology, time, and school for students. This book explores how students’ responses to these extraordinary times shaped their identities as learners and writers, as well as their perceptions of education.

This book traces the voices of a diverse group of university students, from first-year to doctoral students, over the first two years of the pandemic. Students discussed the effects of having their homes forced to serve as classrooms, work, and living spaces, as they also navigated much of school and life through their digital screens. The affective and embodied experiences of this disruption and uncertainty, and the memories and narratives constructed from those experiences, challenged and remade students’ relationships with place, digital media, and school itself. Understanding students’ perceptions of these times has implications for imagining innovative and empathetic approaches to literacy and learning going forward.

In a time when disruptions, including but not limited to the pandemic, continue to ripple and resonate through education and culture, this book provides important insights for researchers and teachers in literacy and writing studies, education, media studies, and any seeking a better understanding of students and learning in this precarious age.

Chapter One Introduction: Disruption and Emergence in Extraordinary
Times

Interchapter The Timeline of the Pandemic at One University

Chapter Two Affect and Embodiment in Writing During the Pandemic

Chapter Three The Uncertain and Shifting Social Contexts of Emotion and
School

Chapter Four Memory, Narrative, and the Shaping of Identities Through the
Pandemic

Chapter Five Going to "School" or Staying "Home": Remaking Places and
Place

Chapter Six Rethinking Relationships With, and Through, Digital Media

Chapter Seven Writing Out of Time: Temporal Disruptions and Literacy
Experiences

Chapter Eight Experiences of Education and Relationships of Learning in the
Pandemic

Chapter Nine Conclusion: The Ongoing Ripples from Disruptions for Literacy
and Learning
Bronwyn T. Williams is a Professor of English and Endowed Chair in Rhetoric and Composition at the University of Louisville. He writes and teaches on issues of literacy, identity, sustainability, digital media, and writing pedagogy. His previous books include Literacy Practices and Perceptions of Agency: Composing Identities; New Media Literacies and Participatory Popular Culture Across Borders; Shimmering Literacies: Popular Culture and Reading and Writing Online; and Identity Papers: Literacy and Power in Higher Education.