Implementing Feminist Language Pedagogy: Development of Students’ Critical Consciousness and L2 Writing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Feminism, like antiracism, is thus not simply one more social issue in ESL but a way of thinking, a way of teaching, and, most importantly, a way of learning.—Arleen Schenke, 1996, p. 158
2. Feminist Pedagogy
2.1. Background
Feminist pedagogy examines power dynamics both inside and outside the classroom. It encourages learners to focus on their own and others’ lived realities and experiences through a lens that examines gender, race, class, sexual identity, and other categories of power and marginalization. It acknowledges oppressed people and does not separate knowledge from the sociocultural contexts in which it is produced.—Ochoa and Pershing, 2011, p. 26
2.2. Tenets of Feminist Pedagogy
3. Feminist Language Pedagogy in Practice
4. Participants and Setting
5. Methodology, Data Collection and Analysis
6. Findings
6.1. Emergence of Critical Consciousness
- 1
- E: I can use my own perspective to look at this topic and judgment and (.) yeah to
- 2
- understand it more, more than just like it’s a female and male problems.
- 3
- H: what do you mean by it’s more than just female male?
- 4
- E: because um when I just know about this topic I think it’s about discrimination but
- 5
- like (.) when I really write about this topic I need to like look at the social structure
- 6
- and the cultural things and for example the oral tradition and the male culture, how
- 7
- they changed so I think it helped me to look at the big picture and more than just
- 8
- discrimination.
- 9
- H: OK, do you feel like you learned anything from this theme? Took anything new
- 10
- away from it?
- 11
- A: I would say like (.) how big of a problem like gender discrimination is, like still is.
- 12
- People in general often like forget how big of a problem it still is (.) like maybe, also
- 13
- for me like thinking back how many problems or how many things I actually
- 14
- experienced that had to do with gender which I didn’t realize before that (.) just like
- 15
- reflecting on my on my past and thinking about that.
- 16
- H: Do you have an example? Of something maybe that the theme maybe made you
- 17
- think about or an experience?
- 18
- A: Probably like the like the how different my like how different I grew up from a lot
- 19
- of other kids back home my parents raised me with my brothers basically saying you
- 20
- could be whatever you want like you don’t have to be like, you don’t have to be a
- 21
- specific gender basically which I as a kid didn’t realize as much was so different but
- 22
- now realized thinking back on it.
But now, since I was no longer able to play, that talent did not matter anymore and I had nothing to defend myself against society… At lunch, instead of playing soccer, I now sat with the other girls, talking about makeup and celebrities. I did not care about these things at all, but I acted like I did. When I had to go somewhere, I would not run like I used to but rather walk, because “girls don’t run” (at least that is what the others said). I stopped wearing soccer clothes during gym class and asked my mom to buy me more girly clothes. After changing all those things, I had more friends again, was from now on only the genius kid. I did not like that change and I felt like I had to give up on myself. Looking back now, I think although I did not abandon my personality, I was forced to learn how to play the character that society wanted me to play and it certainly did not make me happy.After all I’ve been through I can say that, the saying that you can choose your own life, is a lie, society decides it. You can try to change that, but in the end it will cost a lot of energy. I ended up moving to the US where I found friends with whom I did not had to play a character. I was happier in the US than I was in [Europe]. But every time when I go back to [Europe], I have to play that character, and I do it. However, as I get older and wiser (that sounds kind of weird because I’m only [a young undergraduate student]), I can see how I, from day to day, play the character less. How I learn to just be myself again, get my old self back. And I think now that maybe, if society has a problem with who I am, maybe society just needs to change, not me.
6.2. L2 Writing Development
- 23
- H: How did it help you to improve your writing?
- 24
- S: Um just to put my ideas on the spot, with, with the (.) I mean not a great
- 25
- organization at least that’s how I approach free writes just put as many ideas as I
- 26
- could on the paper and then ah that’s why it helped me a lot to to (1) to start my uh
- 27
- my papers for example the narrative it helped me a lot and the research paper and
- 28
- um so I would put my ideas in order and then when I looked at it I had a good like
- 29
- foundation to start my paper and um (1) so yeah I think the free writes definitely, the
- 30
- ones I the ones that (.) helped me the most in my writing.
- 31
- H: And what do you think about it being over critical issues do you think that helped
- 32
- your writing?
- 33
- S: (3) I mean, it did, and ah I just find it really interesting to write about critical issue
- 34
- and uh when you write about critical issues I guess you have (.) something to really
- 35
- think about and so uh and something that you that you (.) that’s one of your concerns
- 36
- so I guess you (2) um you actually, at least in my case enjoy time when you’re writing
- 37
- it you know? Because it uh because you care about that.
7. Discussion
8. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Students’ Country of Origin | Number of Students from Each Country | Students’ L1 |
---|---|---|
China | 3 | Cantonese, Mandarin |
Czech Republic | 1 | Czech |
Egypt | 1 | Arabic |
Germany | 1 | German |
Japan | 2 | Japanese |
Korea | 2 | Korean |
Netherlands | 1 | Dutch |
Portugal | 1 | Portuguese |
Taiwan | 2 | Taiwanese, Mandarin |
Do You Think It Is Important to Talk about Critical Issues in Class? (Such as Politics, the Environment, Race, Gender, etc.) | Number of Students |
---|---|
Yes | 9 |
It depends | 1 |
Not yes or no | 0 |
No | 2 |
Did not respond to the survey | 2 |
Do You Think It Is Important to Talk about Critical Issues in Class? (Such as Politics, the Environment, Race, Gender, etc.) | Number of Students |
---|---|
Yes | 10 |
It depends | 0 |
Not yes or no | 1 |
No | 1 |
Did not respond to the survey | 2 |
Do You Feel Your Writing Has Improved over the Semester? | Number of Students |
---|---|
Yes | 12 |
No | 0 |
Did not respond to the survey | 2 |
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Cannizzo, H.A. Implementing Feminist Language Pedagogy: Development of Students’ Critical Consciousness and L2 Writing. Educ. Sci. 2021, 11, 393. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11080393
Cannizzo HA. Implementing Feminist Language Pedagogy: Development of Students’ Critical Consciousness and L2 Writing. Education Sciences. 2021; 11(8):393. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11080393
Chicago/Turabian StyleCannizzo, Hayley Anne. 2021. "Implementing Feminist Language Pedagogy: Development of Students’ Critical Consciousness and L2 Writing" Education Sciences 11, no. 8: 393. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11080393
APA StyleCannizzo, H. A. (2021). Implementing Feminist Language Pedagogy: Development of Students’ Critical Consciousness and L2 Writing. Education Sciences, 11(8), 393. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11080393