[NIFL-WOMENLIT:3078] An electronic conference

From: Daphne Greenberg (ALCDGG@langate.gsu.edu)
Date: Mon Nov 29 2004 - 12:45:59 EST


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Dear all,

This is from colleagues in British Columbia, Canada.  A limited number
of spaces are available; see below to learn more and join in.



TALKING TEACHING
ADULT AND YOUTH LITERACIES:  INNOVATIVE APPROACHES AND PROMISING
PRACTICES

AN ELECTRONIC CONFERENCE ON THE HUB, DECEMBER 2 - 18, 2004.  Join
HEIDE
SPRUCK WRIGLEY, a researcher in adult literacy who specializes in
making
connections between research and practice, to talk about innovative
approaches and promising practices in adult and youth literacy.

The conference is offered free of charge and takes place in
asynchronous
time.  All you need to participate is a web browser.  A conference ID
and
password will be assigned to you when you register for the conference.

REGRISTRATION DEADLINE IS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2004, 9 AM PACIFIC
TIME.
Please register early as there is a maximum of 50 participants.

TO REGISTER CONTACT SANDY MIDDLETON AT LITERACY BC:
smiddleton@literacy.bc.ca.

When registering, please include the following information:
. Your first and last names.
. Your organizational affiliation and city/town of residence.
. A short paragraph that describes your work and your interest in the
conference topic.

ADULT AND YOUTH LITERACIES: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES AND PROMISING
PRACTICES
The focus of this session will be an exploration of issues in adult
and
youth literacy with a special emphasis on research-based principles to
guide practice. We will discuss "what works" from various perspectives
(theory, research, and classroom teaching) and will offer ideas and
materials grounded in what we know about how people learn and how
language
and literacy develop. Subtopics will include discussions of 8-10
learning
principles particular to language and literacy development in adults,
definitions of what adult and youth literacy is (and what it is not),
and
ways of knowing what students know. Embedded throughout will be ideas
and
promising practices from the literacy field. These may include the use
of
generative materials to lessen preparation time, multi-media to
increase
engagement and build critical literacy, and "smart routines" to
scaffold
literacy performance. We will also discuss the research in "explicit
teaching" (as opposed to "direct" teaching) and whether it constitutes
a
promise or a nightmare for adult literacy.

ABOUT HEIDE SPRUCK WRIGLEY
Heide Spruck Wrigley is a researcher in adult literacy who specializes
in
making connections between research and practice.  Her international
work
includes working with teachers in China, Egypt, Germany, and Poland
and
she currently provides teacher education seminars through several of
the
new regional staff development centres in Texas (and no, supporting
the
Bush administration was not a requirement). Her research work includes
several national studies in the United States around literacy for
language
minority adults, including a large scale five year current effort to
study
what happens when an explicit focus on literacy development is added
to
a
life skills curriculum. Her work in Canada continues as the research
director of the New School Canada, a national youth literacy
demonstration
program in Surrey, BC designed to show how adolescent literacy
students
who face multiple risk factors can be successful in school and
transition
to work, training, or non-sheltered academic programs. The two year
research work has been completed and data analysis is now underway. ~

Heide holds a Ph.D. in education with a specialization in language,
literacy, and learning and a Master's Degreed in Applied Linguistics.
She
has written several books and numerous articles focused on different
aspects of adult and youth literacy, including family literacy and
workforce preparation. She is on a number of advisory boards,
including
the National Center for the Study of Adult Learning and Literacy
(NCSALL)
at Harvard. She is currently serving on two three year panels for the

National Academy of Sciences in Washington, DC where panel members
examine
issues, challenge current thinking, and contribute
scientifically-based
ideas related to (1) the U.S. national assessment on adult literacy
(NAAL)
and (2) the effort by the Department of Homeland Security to design a
new
U.S. citizenship test.

Heide loves teaching and working with teachers and wishes she had more
time to just sit and think. As a tentative move in that direction, she
and
her partner Jim have just bought an old adobe house in the high desert
(over 1000 metres high) of Southern New Mexico, in a small town called
"Mesilla". It's a "project house" so she'll be more likely to wield a
hammer than a pen.

Heide has participated as the lead person in several on-line
conferences
and is looking forward to a lively discussion.


Adult and Youth Literacies:  Innovative Approaches and Promising
Practices
is sponsored by Literacy BC and Capilano College in partnership with
the
Northwest Territories Literacy Council.



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