[PovertyRaceWomen 1391] List nameWE LEARN welearn at litwomen.orgSat Oct 27 10:30:18 EDT 2007
Hi all I'm only now catching up on the 200+ some messages I had unread from this listserv. I'm usually more up-to-date -- but it's been a wildly busy 2 months... Anyway, if it's not too late....I like to recommend that we call this list "Praxis for Literacies." As defined in "Breaking Free," edited by Pepi Leistyna, et.al.: "Praxis is the relationship between theoretical understanding and critique of society (that is, its historical, ideological, sociopolitical, and economic influences and structures) and action that seeks to transform individuals and their environment....[it is] a dialectical movement that goes from action to reflection and from reflection upon action to a new action." (p. 342) Many of us will recognize this from its Freirean roots -- and will understand it in a context of seeking to use literacy/education to transform the inequities and injustices that exist in our programs, communities, regions, countries. In this way, we can discuss the intersections of our diversities. And, for many of us, praxis implies what I believe this list wants to do -- which is to understand how both learners and teachers are disadvantaged and marginalized by systematized oppressions and privileges. This word does assume a certain progressive/deconstructionist stance (for those of you who prefer to use that sort of language). For the rest of us, praxis means education for social change. By using a word such as praxis, we can discuss race/ethnicity, language/culture, gender/women, class/poverty, age, (dis)ability, sexuality, and other diversities without "othering" ourselves or the listserv. We can have powerful discussions (like those that have been happening) without losing vision. And we can take into consideration that these issues are extremely complex and interconnected and cannot be encased only in words such as race, class, gender. Literacies means that we can understand education in a broader holistic sense, not merely in the functionalities of reading, writing, and arithmetic. And thanks to those who have spoken highly of WE LEARN. The call for Proposals for the March 2008 conference is now ready and I will post it in a separate email later today. You will see that the theme for the upcoming conference extends the discussion already happening on this list. Mev Mev Miller, Ed.D., Director WE LEARN Women Expanding: Literacy Education Action Resource Network www.litwomen.org/welearn.html 182 Riverside Ave. Cranston, RI 02910 401-383-4374 welearn at litwomen.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/diversity/attachments/20071027/5696d63a/attachment.html
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