會議論文
Popular culture goes to school in Hong Kong: Troubling the articulation of the 'learning English through popular culture' curriculum
- Popular culture goes to school in Hong Kong: Troubling the articulation of the 'learning English through popular culture' curriculum
- 2009
- Redesigning Pedagogy International Conference: Designing New Learning Contexts for a Globalising World, National Institute of Education (2009: Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- 未指定或無法歸類
- Come August 2009, schools in Hong Kong will be rolling out a new Language Arts Elective called "Learning English Through Popular Culture" to be offered to the Senior Form. This new Popular Culture elective in the New Senior Curriculum is of analytic interest as Hong Kong is the first schooling system, at least in Asia, to take Popular Culture seriously and translate it as "curriculum-as-knowledge" in the national curriculum. While the relationship between Popular Culture and its relevance for schooling and classroom pedagogies has been explored in educational research, in the last decade or so, research conducted in this field has yielded a somewhat tentative and predictable finding often expressed as "pedagogical implications for literacy education and curriculum development" and, as isolated case studies. Yet the Hong Kong education system has taken up what appears to be a bold move to re-design its English Language Curriculum to include Popular Culture - a new curriculum that ostensibly takes into consideration students' interests in popular cultural texts to promote the learning of English. Promising as this new curriculum might be, there are however inherent pedagogical trouble spots in the spelled out curriculum. This paper critically examines and unpacks the articulation of the pedagogical knowledge of the new elective. Although the "curriculum-in-use" remains to be seen, I argue in this paper that the pedagogical investments of this new elective as defined in the curriculum, is reduced to "reading" and "writing" text types, where students are likely to be locked into a procedural way of "thinking" and "doing" popular cultural texts. I suggest how a critical pedagogical practice might be a more productive way of teaching the popular culture curriculum.
- Paper presented at the Redesigning Pedagogy International Conference: Designing New Learning Contexts for a Globalising World, National Institute of Education
-
- 英文
- 會議論文
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/tc/bibs/cd549d2c
- 2015-10-08
最近的會議論文
共同成功: 促進香港主流和非主流學生的福祉及學校與社會參與會議論文
語料庫在提升古代漢語教學效果中的角色會議論文
紀行致遠:香港融合教育回顧與展望會議論文
Comparing the effectiveness of an emotion regulation intervention for preservice teachers in Canada and Hong Kong會議論文
What we learnt from training Hong Kong teacher leaders about national educational system and development in mainland China會議論文
Closing the learning gap for ethnic minority children: A case study of early childhood education in Hong Kong會議論文
Supporting teacher leadership and growth會議論文
Teaching Hong Kong literature會議論文