Original Research - Special Collection: Early Childhood Development in Theory and Practice

Everyday literacy practices: Normalising the school literate child

Colwyn D. Martin
South African Journal of Childhood Education | Vol 11, No 1 | a946 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/sajce.v11i1.946 | © 2021 Colwyn D. Martin | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 05 October 2020 | Published: 05 August 2021

About the author(s)

Colwyn D. Martin, Department of Education, Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

Background: One can argue that literacy practices work to produce forms of literacy knowledge and literate children in early childhood contexts. However, one needs to interrogate how these literacy practices create technologies of power that construct and normalise the school ready literate child.

Aim: The ethnographic study employed in this article explored everyday literacy practices in early childhood contexts that were considered ‘usual’, the kinds of literate children these practices engendered and its normalising effects on children and teachers.

Settings: The study was conducted in two early childhood centres with two early childhood teachers and teaching children between the ages of 3 and 4.

Methods: The study was qualitative in nature and used participant observation. A genealogical analysis of literacy practices showed how technologies of power were embodied in different literacy practices that worked to construct and normalise the school ready child in different ways.

Results: The findings revealed that everyday literacy practices were used to produce a literate child through disciplinary processes of observation, normalisation and examination. These literacy practices operated in covert ways where school readiness was tied to educational success. However, during this process of normalisation, children began to [re]position themselves within the literacy space, showing individual agency and self-regulation.

Conclusion: Although the findings of this study are not generalisable, it has implications for how literacy and literacy practices are conceptualised in early childhood settings. This article advocates a reconceptualisation of school readiness by questioning embedded practices within the competence model of school readiness and calls for the early childhood field to dissect incisively what and who are advantaged and disadvantaged through early literacy practices.


Keywords

early childhood; literacy practices; disciplinary power; genealogy; normalisation; agency; self-regulation

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