This text is excerpted from by Kathryn F. Whitmore (Language Arts, Sept 2015).
Imagination, as part of play, allows children to conceive of things they have not yet experienced forthemselves, including defining themselves as literate.
For children who are viewed by deficit mainstream school discoursesas “less than” more “normal” children, a view of literacy as embodied and multimodal opensthe door to local understandings of children’s participation (Kliewer, 2008; Collins, 2011) and,therefore, children’s identities.
In . . . , all children can imagine new places, whom they might become in those places, and ways to solve problems in those spaces (Catterall, 2009).
Explore the world of pretend and how it can afford young children “the space andencouragement to take on additional literate identities” in an inspiring new article in the SeptemberLanguage Arts:
For children who are viewed by deficit mainstream school discoursesas “less than” more “normal” children, a view of literacy as embodied and multimodal opensthe door to local understandings of children’s participation (Kliewer, 2008; Collins, 2011) and,therefore, children’s identities.