Abstract

This article aims at reflecting upon how Critical Trans-literacies (Canagarajah, 2020; Pennycoook, 2006) and processes of Colonialities of Power and Knowledge (Quijano, 1992) and Being (Maldonado-Torres, 2007) can be tackled in a Teaching Certificate Course. As teachers in-devir (Deleuze; Guattari, 2011b) participate in the co-construction of pedagogical materials supplemented (Derrida, 1993) by their own experiences as students and teachers of languages, the media, and textbooks, they engage in their own teaching-research processes, practice-and-as-theory and theory-and-as-practice (Mignolo; Walsh, 2019) that intertwine with-and their own teaching-research and learning-research experiences. Trans-literacies and the affordances of the Information and Communication Digital Technologies (Giddens, 1991), Media and textbooks are used as mediation tools (Vigotski, 2001) to provoke movements of thought and teaching-research movements in the classrooms. By being critically engaged in designing and co-creating pedagogical materials localized in their multiple and heterogeneous territories (XXXXX, 2021), our colonized minds of teachers of English as a foreign language are provoked by learning to read ourselves (Freire, 2005), critically (Monte Mór, 2019) and hopefully, deterritorialize and reterritorialize some of the Eurocentric modernity-rationality paradigms (Quijano, 1992) and try to co-construct knowledges and worlds otherwise in the Global South (Sousa Santos, 2010).

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