Ernest Morrell

Media.Culture.Pedagogy.

Home Page

My Calendar

Photo Gallery

Philosophy

Giving

Action

Blog

Professor

Bio

Courses

Research Projects

Statement of Research

Books

Articles

Chapters

Papers

Encyclopedia Entries

PowerPoints

Literacy

NLS

City Kids II

Teaching City Kids

Revolutionizing Education

Powerful English

Sociocultural Theory

Critical Literacy

Literacy Education

Media Literacies

Critical Pedagogy

People

Works

Groups

Sites

Terms

Cultural Studies

Essays

Links

Theorists

Schools

Hip-hop

Music

TV

Film Studies

Cyberspace

Media

Af Am Studies

Everyday Antiracism

Plays

Poetry

Resolve and Inspiration

Out of the Oven Undone

Seasons and Cycles

Postmodern Question

May Daze

Unurban Scrawl

A Rose of Any Color

Somewhere in This

These Things I Know

Genghis Cohen

Media Production

Radio Stations

Record Labels

Desert Highway Films

Music Publishing

Virtual Magazines

Photography

Criticism

Lyrics

Fiction

Novels

Short Stories

My Essays

Taking Action

IDEA

R.O.O.T

City Arts and Justice

The Botanical Project

Being Green

The Palpable Revolution

The Educated Citizen

HIV/AIDS

Two New Titles Due Out in 2007-2008!

The Art of Critical Pedagogy: The Possibilities of Moving from Theory to Practice in Urban Schools (Peter Lang) Spring 2008

Critical Literacy and Urban Youth: Pedagogies of Access, Dissent, and Liberation (Routledge) Fall 2007

My Books


Editorial Review from Amazon.com

Morrell's book is profoundly important for teachers, teacher educators, and those who are interested in issues of 21st literacy acquisition more generally. What separates Morrell's work from so much of the other pieces in this field is that they are emergent out of literacy instruction that he is actually doing himself. Much of what passes for literacy theory and urban educational theory more generally is profound on paper and passe in practice. This happens in large part because teachers struggle to understand what it means for them in their day to day practice and urban teacher educators struggle to help them with this challenge. Much can be said about why this is the case, but Morrell's book helps us to begin to understand how to circumvent this shortcoming in the field of literacy development.

Morrell's book begins by helping us understand the expanding definition of literacy in lives of 21st Century youth. Although Lee, Gee, Alvermann and others are beginning to investigate this topic with more vigor, there is still a dearth of research on the ways in which popular cultural literacies are exploding traditional definitions of being literate. The historically conservative definition of literacy is tremendously significant for our understanding of literacy development and instruction among new century youth. Morrell's work helps us to understand this theoretically. But, what makes the book even more compellling and useful for those involved in educating young people, or preparing/supporting those that plan to do so, is that he maps this theory onto real classroom practice. Drawing from his own practice and the voices of America's most marginalized youth, Morrell provides readers with a grounded theory of practice about engaging secondary literacy instruction. The books is particulary useful because it gives educators insight into the practice of drawing on youth popular cultural literacies as a scaffold into more traditional academic literacy acquistion. The book is replete with examples of how this can be accomplished, the theoretical underpinnings to justify such an approach, and resources for teachers that are inclined to take on such a project in their own work.

I highly recommend this book for literacy instructors at all levels and those involved with the challenge of preparing/supporting teachers in this endeavor.

Book Description from Amazon.com

Becoming Critical Researchers analyzes the findings of a two-year ethnographic study of the apprenticeship of urban youth as critical researchers of popular culture. Drawing on new literacy studies, critical pedagogy, and sociocultural learning theory, this book documents the changes in student participation within a critical research-focused community of practice. These changes include the acquisition and development of academic and critical literacies and the resulting translations of these literacies into increased academic performance, greater access to college, and commitment to social action. This book inserts critical and postmodern theory into the conception and evaluation of classroom practice and its findings suggest that programs centering on the lived experiences of teens can indeed achieve the goals of critical education, while also promoting academic achievement in urban schools.

Ernest Morrell, Ph.D.
1015 Gayley Ave. Suite #1115
Los Angeles, CA 90024

morrell@gseis.ucla.edu