16 Facts About Critical literacy

1.

Critical literacy is the ability to find embedded discrimination in media.

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2.

Critical literacy is an instructional approach that advocates the adoption of "critical" perspectives toward text.

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3.

Critical literacy is actively analysing texts and includes strategies for what proponents describe as uncovering underlying messages.

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4.

Critical literacy has become a popular approach to teaching English to students in some English speaking-countries, including Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the UK.

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5.

Critical literacy thinking is done when one troubleshoots problems and solves them through a process involving logic and mental analysis.

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6.

Critical literacy practices grew out of the social justice pedagogy of Brazilian educator and theorist Paulo Freire, described in his 1967 Education as the Practice of Freedom and his 1968 Pedagogy of the Oppressed.

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7.

Freirean critical literacy is conceived as a means of empowering populations against oppression and coercion, frequently seen as enacted by corporations or governments.

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8.

Critical literacy was later established more prominently with Donaldo Macedo in 1987.

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9.

Critical literacy pedagogy seeks to oppression by changing the way schools teach.

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10.

Critical literacy helps teachers as well as students to explore the relationship between theoretical framework and its practical implications.

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11.

The first step of critical literacy involves bringing awareness, or "consciousness" as Freire terms it, to those who are mistreated and to those who bring about this mistreatment through promoting unfair ideologies via politics and other positions of power, such as schools and government.

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12.

Second factor of critical literacy seeks to transform the way in which the schools teach.

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13.

Ira Shor writes that critical literacy can be used to reveal one's subjective beliefs about the world by causing them to question their personal assumptions through using words.

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14.

Critical literacy allows students to develop their ability to understand the messages found in online articles and other sources of media such as news stations or journalism through careful analysis of the text and how the text is presented.

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15.

Younger children can learn to practice critical literacy by having a teacher read picture books out loud to them as the children learn to examine what messages the images and paragraphs in the picture books convey.

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16.

Lastly, critical literacy prepares students to recognize the importance of language in the formation of politics, social hierarchy, race, and power because the way in which phrases are worded can impact the overall message.

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