Antero Garcia’s research while affiliated with Stanford University and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Civic Writing on Digital Walls
  • Article

October 2019

·

43 Reads

·

13 Citations

Journal of Literacy Research

Jeremiah H. Kalir

·

Antero Garcia

Civic writing has appeared on walls over centuries, across cultures, and in response to political concerns. This article advances a civic interrogation of how civic writing is publicly authored, read, and discussed as openly accessible and multimodal texts on digital walls. Drawing upon critical literacy perspectives, we examine how a repertoire of 10 civic writing practices associated with open web annotation (OWA) helped educators develop critical literacy. We introduce a social design experiment in which educators leveraged OWA to discuss educational equity across sociopolitical texts and contexts. We then describe a single case of OWA conversation among educators and use discourse analysis to examine shifting situated meanings and political expressions present in educators’ civic writing practices. We conclude by considering implications for theorizing the marginality of critical literacy, designing learning environments that foster educators’ civic writing, and facilitating learning opportunities that encourage educators’ civic writing across digital walls.

Citations (1)


... While Gutiérrez (2008) discusses how a collective Third Space nurtures learning for youth from nondominant groups, other educators have used the design to support teacher learning. For example, the Marginal Syllabus is an online professional development project for K-12 teachers, university students, and university researchers that uses the social annotation tool Hypothesis to facilitate discussions about educational equity scholarship (Kalir & Garcia, 2019). The success of the Marginal Syllabus points to a need for more examples of online collective Third Spaces that realize the possibility of social annotation for educator learning. ...

Reference:

Exploring AnnotateEdTech as an Online Collective Third Space for Developing Teachers' Learning and Humanizing Practices With Technology
Civic Writing on Digital Walls
  • Citing Article
  • October 2019

Journal of Literacy Research