A Trek Through the Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy: 2005-2009

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Scope and Slant
The scope of JAAL is mostly focused on helping educators promote and improve literacy inside and outside of school. Literacy includes reading and writing, which would explain why JAAL contains articles about both components of literacy—although they are more focused on reading than writing. There are definite patterns, such as digital literacy, multicultural education, and student-centered learning. The patterns arise from “hot topics” in literacy education. JAAL seems to publish articles that are connected to those topics in which educators and the public have interest.
JAAL seems to follow the political ideologies of the IRA as well as its current editor. Bean and Harper state strongly that they “believe that teaching literacy in these times means confronting change and the politics of institutional change, which speaks to the need for critical policy analysis” (Bean and Harper 5). Slants and biases seem to slip in throughout the journal. For example, in Goodson’s farewell editorial, he alludes to educational reform changing our outlook on “failing” students, claiming “We have decided to force [the failing students] to join the middle class, whether [they] want to or not” (Goodson 626).
JAAL also published articles that were staunchly anti-high-stakes assessment and educational policy like No Child Left Behind, such as “No Child Left Behind: What it Means for U.S. Adolescents and What We can do about It” by Conley and Hinchman in which they discuss issues and questions raised about No Child Left Behind (NCLB) and how some aspects of the program may be detrimental (47). Dennis’ article, another article criticizing high-stakes assessments, claims that the categories big-government assessments place st...

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...g Reader to Struggling Reader: High School Students’ Responses to a Cross-Age Tutoring Program.” Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy. . 49.5 (2006). 378-396. Print.
Ranker, Jason. “Making Meaning on the Screen: Digital Video Production about the Dominican Republic.” Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy. 51.5 (2008). 410-422. Print.
Taylor, Donna Lester. “’Not Just Boring Stories’” Reconsidering the Gender Gap for Boys.” Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy. 48.4 (2005). 290-298. Print.
White-Kaulaity. “Reflections on Native American Reading: A Seed, a Tool, and a Weapon.” Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy. 50.7 (2007). 560-569. Print.
Wissman, Kelly K. “’Making a Way’: Young Women Using Literacy and Language to Resist the Politics of Silencing.” Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy. 51.4 (2007/2008). 340-349. Print.

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