Abstract
In this paper, I briefly track the emergence and foci of academic literacies as a field of inquiry, summarising its contributions to understandings about writing and meaning making in academia. Writing from my specific geohistorical location in the UK, I foreground the importance of early key works that encapsulated concerns about deficit orientations to students’ language and literacy practices (e.g. Ivanič, 1998; Lea and Street,1998). I also underline the transnational dimension to the development of academic literacies which has helped drive forward intellectual debates about the relationship between academic language and literacy practices, and participation in academia. I argue that academic literacies provides an important space for critically exploring what are often taken-for-granted assumptions about the nature and value of academic writing conventions, and the ways these (both assumptions and conventions) impact on opportunities for participation in knowledge making. This critical thinking space continues to serve as an intellectual resource for researchers, teachers and students in contemporary neo-liberal higher education, where regimes of evaluation are super-normative, even in (or because of) a context of super-diversity, that is increased mobility of peoples and semiotic practices. Academic literacies as praxis necessarily involves straddling both normative and transformative orientations (Lillis and Scott, 2007) or what Hall (1992) refers to as the ‘academic’ and ‘intellectual’ dimensions to academia.
Highlights
My aim in this paper is to briefly outline what I see as the contribution of academic literacies over the past 20 years to understandings about writing in the academy
Tracking the emergence and foci of academic literacies and its future relevance to both theory and practice, I argue that academic literacies provides an important space for critically exploring what are often taken-for-granted assumptions about the nature and value of academic writing conventions for participation in knowledge making
The shift away from a university premised on the participation of a small, elite and relatively homogeneous student population put the spotlight on issues of diversity − of students’ experiences of life, learning, of language, literacy and semiotic practices − and made visible a significant gap between students and the academy in terms of understandings and expectations
Summary
My aim in this paper is to briefly outline what I see as the contribution of academic literacies over the past 20 years to understandings about writing in the academy. Such a critical thinking space continues to serve as an intellectual resource for researchers, teachers and students in a neo-liberal higher education, where regimes of evaluation are supernormative, even in (or because of) a context of super-diversity, that is increased mobility of peoples and semiotic practices.
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