Didactic Pedagogy In The Literacy Classroom

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The term literacy has traditionally been defined as the ability to read and write, however in the 21st century literacy has grown beyond just reading and writing making the literacy classroom multi-faceted and complex. As a consequence teachers need to help their students develop their own perspectives, but also look at how to change the way in which students become literate individuals. Incorporating literacy pedagogies in the classroom will provide a relevant and powerful foundation for children’s learning, shaped by four major pedagogies that have evolved throughout history; Didactic literacy, authentic literacy, critical literacy and functional literacy. These pedagogies engage students in learning formal rules of phonics and grammar, become immersed in meaningful …show more content…

Didactic pedagogy is the oldest of the pedagogical approaches. Its philosophies were implemented from ancient scholars as early as Plato, Aristotle and St Benedict (Varnado, 2011). By the 19th century, didactic pedagogy became the basis for mass compulsory education, sometimes being referred to as “traditional teaching” (Kalantzis & Cope, 2012). This distinctive mode of pedagogy revolved around the approach where the teacher had total control of the learning and classroom activities were organised in such a way as to force each student to practice skills and memorise facts, with answers being either right or wrong (Jablonski, 2009). Whilst, critics have condemned this form of learning, didactic pedagogy remains very active in the 21st century classroom (Kalantzis & Cope, 2015). Didactic pedagogy is teacher-centered, where learners are consumers of knowledge through copying, repetition, memorisation of rules and conventions (Seely, Flint, Kitson, Lowe & Shaw, 2014). The Australian Curriculum syllabus promotes learning of synthetic phonics, traditional

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