Critical Literacy: Beyond Reading and Writing in the Bahamian Tertiary Classroom

Authors

  • Marie Sairsingh University of The Bahamas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15362/ijbs.v23i0.291

Keywords:

English language, Critical literacy, Critical Pedagogy, Social transformation, Bahamian national identity

Abstract

Critical literacy can be defined as a cluster of specialized skills and competencies that facilitate an intensely engaged way of interpreting our world through careful textual and discursive analyses. It involves understanding the processes of learning to read and write as the precursor to a heightened awareness of one’s location within specific power relations, as well as its importance to ensuring a sustainable democracy. Ultimately, critical literacy is an indispensable component of the broader literacy mandate at the University of The Bahamas, as it can propel students toward greater participation in national discourse, and ultimately, toward meaningful social transformation. While this paper presents anecdotal rather than analytic evidence of students’ growth toward increased critical intelligence, it provides significant insight into the processes of their intellectual growth.

Author Biography

Marie Sairsingh, University of The Bahamas

School of English Studies Associate Professor

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Published

2017-09-28