IMAGE AND VOICE IN ADULT LITERACY by NAOME SOLEIL B. A., The University of Victoria, 1985 B. Ed,, Hie University of Ottawa, 1989 M.A., Carleton University, 1994 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES Department of Language and Literacy Education We accept this thesis as conforming tq/fhe required standard THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA July 2002 © Naome Soleil, 2002 In presenting this thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that permission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the head of my department or by his or her representatives. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. (Signature) Vancouver, Canada Date (ht* 1. do no DE-6 (2/88) ii A B S T R A C T This qualitative research study explores the use of television as text in adult literacy as a means of bridging orality and literacy. The reason for selecting television as an educational tool was to provide equal access to stories for both non-readers and readers of print, and the 22 research participants were required to complete a survey and participate in four 2-hour workshops, and a taped interview. During the workshops, participants learned to actively engage with the texts that were edited stories from the Canadian television series North of 60. The researcher included reading strategies to encourage the participants' interaction with the texts as active "readers" (see Fiske, 1987; Buckingham, 1993; Bianculli, 1992) and brainstorming to increase their vocabulary prior to writing reflective responses. First, how television as text influences an adult literacy student's ability to transfer information from oral texts into print texts is analyzed. The findings indicate that television allows non-readers, reluctant readers, and delayed readers of English to learn literary terms and conventions that apply to print stories and practise four domains of language acquisition - listening, speaking, reading, and writing. A selection of each participant's written responses to the stories and interview fragments have been analyzed. Whenever possible, the selection is based on a participant's favorite story or personal connection to a character. iii Second, the effect of brainstorming on written responses has been examined. This technique is a pre-writing strategy the researcher used not only to assist the participants in recording vocabulary relevant to the story, but also to provide opportunities for sharing ideas in the construction of meaning. Based on data collected during the interviews, individuals with short-term memory problems indicate that repetition of vocabulary through brainstorming, note-taking, and discussion reinforces memory retention, and second language learners gain knowledge of pronunciation by hearing and rehearsing vocabulary from the stories. Third, factors contributing to the participants' reflective oral and written responses to the television stories have been analyzed. The main factors contributing to reflective thinking and writing involve the research pedagogy and the development of reflective skills through practice. The researcher's reflective methodology combines phenomenology, critical ethnography, and emancipatory practice from the diverse perspectives of van Manen (1990), Haig-Brown and Archibald (1996), and Freire (1974,1994,1997,1998) who have informed this study together with other researchers in the respective fields. This method situates the research participants and the researcher in a partnership in which everyone contributes through dialogue to the learning process. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract ii Table of Contents iv List of Figures vii Acknowledgements viii Dedication ix Preface x CHAPTER 1: LANDSCAPES IN LEARNING Introduction 1 New Beginnings 1 Why TV in Adult Literacy 2 Exploring Representations of Reality 12 Locating Meaning in Three Voices 14 Rationale for the Study 15 Watching Versus Reading TV 15 Providing Equal Access to Literacy 19 Research Questions : ....22 Overview of the Study 24 Selection of Participants 30 Ethical Concerns 33 CHAPTER 2: BACKGROUND OF THE RESEARCHER 38 Background Influences 39 Renewing a Journey in Education 43 V CHAPTER 3: REFLECTIVE RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 49 Pathways to Reflective Research . 50 Practitioners of Reflective Methods 51 Changing Patterns in Reflective Learning 55 Reflective Methods in Research and Practice 59 CHAPTER 4: STORY SUMMARIES 67 Workshop One: Competition .. 67 Workshop Two: Corrections 70 Workshop Three: The Outsider 72 Workshop Four: Safe Home 76 CHAPTER 5: SITE ONE .. 82 Introduction 82 Overview of Site One Participants 86 Physical Layout 90 Workshop Highlights 91 Reflections on Oral and Written Responses 99 Participant: Jane 99 Participant: David I l l Participant: Rena 118 Participant: Sylvia 127 Participant: Don 132 Participant: Dawn . 136 Participant: Joan 141 Participant: Kris ....149 Participant: Amelia 155 Participant: John 163 Participant: Ellen 169 CHAPTER 6: SITE TWO 175 Introduction ..175 Overview of Research Participants 178 Physical Layout 180 Researcher/Instructor Relationship 182 Reflections on Oral and Written Responses 185 v i Participant: Lauren 185 Participant: Maureen 191 Participant: Mercedes 197 Participant: Emily 206 Participant: Matt 215 Participant: Shauna 226 Participant: Darlene 235 Participant: Janine 243 CHAPTER 7: SITE THREE 251 Introduction 251 Overview of the Research Participants 253 Physical Layout 255 Reflections on Oral and Written Responses 257 Participant: Allen 257 Participant: Steve 265 Participant: Fiona 271 CHAPTER 8: CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS Reflections on the Learners' Landscapes 280 Research Limitations 285 Research Findings 291 Survey Summary 291 Comments on Survey Results 293 Response to Research Question #1 295 Response to Research Question #2 : 300 Response to Research Question #3 303 Implications of the Research Study 308 Researcher's Reflections 312 Epilogue 317 Bibliography 31g Appendixes 325 List of Figures Figure 1. Model of Reflective Learning Vlll Acknowledgements To the Creator and the ancestors who have listened silently, patiently for my voice to gain strength, thank you. To Dr. Victor Froese, Professor Emeritus and Advisor, who has walked in my moccasins across smooth and rough ground with dedication, encouragement, sensitivity, and humor, thank you. To Committee Members, Drs. Linda Siegel and Rita Irwin for their support, thoughtfulness, and insight, thank you. To Alannah Young and the First Nations House of Learning for spiritual teachings, leadership, and a home away from home, thank you. To Alliance-Atlantis Productions who gave permission to use segments from "North of 60" in my research, thank you. To the research participants whose oral and written reflections have been the greatest source of inspiration and hope, thank you. To the instructors who welcomed research as an enrichment in their classrooms and gave of their time and space, thank you. To the images and voices in teaching and learning who have shared their knowledge and power in a good way, thank you. For Heidi, Patrick, Graham, and Blythe "We cannot all do great things, but we can all do little things with greater love/' St. Therese X Preface The story of school begins with blame, banner-high across the furrowed brow of an expert talking to the parent talking to the child, formed by taut lips, spelled as signs of disapproval, punishment. Can't do it. Try harder. Words shift learning from fun to frustration, belonging to alienation, limiting possibility, forming inadequacy. Next, shame consumes body, mind, spirit as a feeling before language can name it, the struggle to write right dismembers learning in Grade One where tiny fingers wrap around a monstrous red stick, shackled to dirty lead smudges on white pages with blue wavy lines, tangled scrawl shifting, never static to the small one's eyes so the teacher must be lying, the one who says, "stay on the straight line." Can't do it. There is no straight line, liar. Try harder. Those signs, images, voices collect on-line in the mind, but the lead refuses to obey. The story tellings in the body write endless hurtful paragraphs of impossibility constricting ideas into knots in head, throat, belly filling with fear that shrieks instantly at the sight of print. 'Illiterate' imprisons, imposes a label as less than in a literate society where public places—school, library, museum, art gallery, bank, office—deform, immobilize, intimidate, dishearten. Unlearning opens spaces, breathes in/ out fresh possibilities, hears voices of the unheard, wipes away tears. Listen, speak, read, write with mind, emotions, spirit, whole body language learning in adult literacy. . 1 CHAPTER 1: LANDSCAPES OF LEARNING Introduction New Beginnings I have never met an adult literacy student who did not recall images and voices of childhood horrors in school—emotional/mental/ physical/spiritual torment that went along with negative labels—stupid/ dumb/ loser/ failure— racial insults, disrespect. How to re-imagine a future of hope and possibility requires risk-taking as literacy learners work through past barriers in order to re-envision themselves as readers/ writers. Freire (1994) writes, "Hope is an ontological need. Hopelessness is but hope that has lost its bearings, and become a distortion of that ontological need" (p. 8). Generally, adult literacy students who are determined to read and write recall Grade One as a significant turning point when learning seemed harder for them than their classmates. Literacy skills emerged at a slower pace causing increasing delay and frustration. To gain confidence in an adult educational environment, the teacher and student(s) need to develop a safe and respectful partnership so that school becomes a place of enjoyment and possibility. Adult literacy learners return to school prepared to take a chance on a different way of being. The progression from illiteracy to literacy changes an individual's self-concept and life-style. Giroux (1988) identifies the educational terrain "where meaning, desire, language, and values engage and respond to the deeper beliefs about the very nature of what it means to be human, to dream, to 2 name and struggle for a particular future and way of life" (p. 4). What it means to be human is a recurring theme in this research study as diverse voices respond to television stories from North of 60 that depict social issues of everyday life. Why TV in Adult Literacy? As the title of this research study suggests, image and voice are explored by the researcher to reveal the multi-dimensional processes involved in language learning. Interacting with oral/ visual stories that depict representations of relevant social issues creates tensions between real and storied lives. During the study, the research participants voice their opinions, question images from the texts that challenge their assumptions, recall memories of past experience, envision actions for growth and change, describe personal understanding of the stories, and discover moments of self-awareness in the process of constructing meaning. By featuring television as text in adult literacy, the researcher utilizes different elements of image and voice in every aspect of the research study. Television programming, though scripted for the most part, transmits information by oral and visual means. The average non-reader of print texts can access, store, and retrieve vast quantities of information through technology; however, it could be assumed that a viewer of television, videos, and film without a background in print literacy might lack the analytical skills to produce knowledge. According to Freire and Giroux in Giroux and Simon et al. (1989), "to be literate is not simply to know something; it also means knowing how to participate reflectively in the very act of producing knowledge" (p. xi). While both Freire and Giroux inspire me as an educator and inform my research and practice, I disagree with the implication that people have to be literate to participate reflectively in the production of knowledge. This is because information can be acquired through non-print media and transferred into knowledge through past knowledge and lived experience. In order to demonstrate reflective processing in the transfer of information into knowledge, I introduce reflective methods. Reflection as a process of constructing meaning requires a learner to explore different perspectives, challenge assumptions, examine inconsistencies, and delve into mystery. Such a process encourages people to re-read existing social situations as sites of change in which they can participate as citizens in a democratic society. To become agents of change requires continual questioning of facts and opinions and remaining open to alternative ways of interacting in classrooms and in the world. Reflection processes information through a synthesis of mind, body, emotions, and spirit. Fleckenstein (1996) argues that our privileging of print texts and writing "marginalizes efforts to synthesize image and language" while "those who lack language facility, those who "read" the iconography of our culture and conceptualize in imagistic terms are not literate, despite the belief that these icons dictate the future structure of a culture" (p. 916). She suggests that imagery plays a significant role in the construction of meaning and that imagery is not only "the center of being" (p. 918) but also the "primary means of ordering [our] 4 reality.. . and ecological/historical situatedness" (p. 919). Of particular interest to me is Fleckenstein's assertion that images create a fusion between information and emotional involvement which links imagistic thought with the causes and effects of our actions (p. 921). Becoming active readers or "teleliterate" creates awareness of this fusion of images, emotions, reflections, and actions that inform the participants'oral and written responses to the stories. The television stories selected for the research study portray characters dealing with fear, betrayal, abuse of power, neglect, rejection, racism, sexual orientation, grief, sympathy, tolerance, affection, strength, and courage. Such a range of human experiences inevitably generates reader response. Freire and Giroux in Gixoux and Simon, et al. (1989) advocate that "literacy be constructed and experienced within social relations that legitimate popular culture, cultural diversity, and dialogue as crucial elements in the debate about citizenship and cultural-social justice" (p. xi). Certainly, the stories selected for the study from the Canadian television series North of 60 inspire debate on issues of cultural diversity, social responsibility, and justice. Simon (1992), in referring to Freire's work, says that what is crucial "is the constant reminder that the dialogue in which students and teacher are to participate together is always grounded in the realities of the lived relations within which the participants find themselves" (p. 96). Representations of social reality revealed in the stories from North of 60 provide opportunities for adult 5 literacy students to debate relevant issues of everyday life while exploring the tensions between textual realism and personal reality. In the gap between realities, the research participants examine situational conflicts as sites for (re)action, reflection, and transformation. (Friere, 1974) Insights into the attitudes and behaviours of television's fictional characters challenge readers to insert themselves alongside the storied lives and to consider ways of rewriting their own and "other people's images" (Willinsky, 1991, p. 63). Negotiating self-identity and shifting perspectives are ongoing processes in adult literacy where students often resist change, initially, despite their goal to belong to the literate community. For adult literacy learners, resistance to structural conditions which control their lives is a necessary process to empowerment and change according to Smyth (1989) who notes that "people embark on a process of becoming different by thinking critically and creatively, so as to pursue meanings that enable them to make increasing sense of the world in which they live" (p.214). During interviews, a few of the research participants revealed resistances to language learning. I refer to resistance that impedes learning as an unlearning process in which teacher(s) and student(s) work together, becoming aware of each other's points of resistance through dialogue. Learning needs to be reciprocal and dynamic, not a one-way, teacher-centred transmission of information and knowledge. 6 Unlearning is always in flux as is learning which allows individual, subjective knowing to have a say. Willinsky (1991) writes, "We live by texts. We are written by them, and some we write" (p. 58). Television texts are imaged messages that involve mind, body, emotions, and spirit, yet while the majority of North Americans see/hear these visual/oral texts on a daily basis, adult literacy students are rarely given an opportunity to analyze the information they gather, reflect on what the information means to them, or express their views in oral or written responses to the texts. As a researcher, I feel a sense of responsibility for accessing materials that are relevant to students' lives. Encouraging their participation in popular culture as an educational resource is one way to enhance their curiosity about the power and production of language presented as a non-print medium. When I ask students what their main purpose is for being in school, they usually express a desire for knowledge. School is about acquiring knowledge, so then I probe further to find out if it is possible to acquire knowledge outside of school. The misconception that teachers are the keepers of knowledge puts adult literacy students at a disadvantage until they gain confidence in sharing what they know with others. To "let the students in on the contest of meanings,.. . not just in forms of pluralism, but to understanding how the differences are encoded forms of power and that what needs cutting and repasting are the high and the low, the centre and the margin, the dominant and the silent" (Willinsky, p. 63) is salient, especially when equality, respect, and social transformation are 7 pivotal to emancipatory theory and practice. By exposing learners to real social issues, reflecting on problems as they are represented, and considering how the problems could be resolved to create better situations, they begin to reformulate their position in relation to other people who dominate the texts that constitute reality. The participants' oral and written responses create the core chapters of the dissertation because voice is vital for empowerment. Stern (1985) explores the organization of 'a core self' interacting with 'a core other'. "In fact, the subjective experiences with another can occur only after a sense of a core self and a core other exists" (p.10). In my research, I encourage the participants, through their analysis and discussion of television stories, to explore their own stories at a deeper level where origins of learning begin to form patterns of knowing and seeing oneself as a subject in relations of power to other subjects. The participants in the study already know how it feels to learn in a climate of disrespect and inequality. Pivotal to recovering a sense of enjoyment in an educational context is to experience a felt sense of respect and belonging. * * * * * * * * Dreamscape: Tender Learning A sign of the feminine stands, facing a forest clearing, and from my omniscient view, f imagine her palms clasped together, see the back of her Liberty cotton sundress tied at the waist with a simple bow, the hemline softly brushing against slender brown legs. Stark white ankle socks and sensible na vy shoes that cushion the ruts of uncertainty. Alone, she watches bear mates peacefully soak in the sun, the neck of one nuzzled against the other's firm back; 8 a knowing pose that asks nothing, only gives their vision a place to discover the scent of her like wind chimes tinkling their nostrils. The healers join together, earthly protectors of the people, harbingers among a community of conifers. * * * * * * * * Chapter 2 outlines my background as a learner and teacher. Experiences in education have influenced my emphasis on emancipatory pedagogy. Freire (1974,1994,1997,1998) has been a significant mentor. Other emancipatory educators cited in the dissertation—hooks, Giroux, Simon—have also been influential in my research and practice. Their commitments to the advancement of social justice and human dignity challenge educators to resist gender, race, and class oppressions that dehumanize and immobilize an individual's right to access information and skills to improve his/her life. In theory and practice, my understanding of emancipatory pedagogy is a belief in the possibility for social transformation. Throughout this dissertation, there will be field notes, poetry, dreams, and recollections (e.g. pp. 7- 8) inspired by a participant or a memory fragment of lived experience that enter the text as an invitation for the reader to pause for a moment of inner inquiry. These textual connections to memories step away from theory and discourse to enter into a reflective landscape, set apart from the main text by italicized print and/or asterisks. Chapter 3, that explains my reflective methods and emphasis on the importance of lived experience, has been inspired in large part by Freire's commitment to emancipatory pedagogy and social transformation. Educators who engage with their adult literacy students as partners in learning know that becoming part of a literate community is life-altering for the students. Freire (1997) says the acquisition of literacy skills is a form of liberation but compares the process of growth and change to "a childbirth, and a painful one" (p.31). The life stories that literacy students carry within them need an audience, a vehicle for expression of who they are, what they know, and what they hope to gain by learning to read and write. Brady (1990) asks, "Is this not our destiny as human beings: to learn, to grow, to come to know ourselves and the meanings of our life in the deepest, richest, most textured way possible? If we do not know the self, what can we know? If we cannot learn from reflection upon our own lived experiences, from what can we leam?" (Kenyon & Randall, 1997, p. 51). To be alive is a work in progress, a collection of life stories already formed, yet paradoxically, in a continual state of re-formation. Throughout my research study, I have gathered inspiration from diverse theorists, methodologists, and practitioners that provide form and texture. The patterns do not conform to any set structure although they meld together, many pieces in the process that inform layers of meaning. The voices of Foucault, Derrida, Weedon and Cherryholmes are heard as ripples along the edges. Native educators who influenced my spiritual path and cultural re-membering include Armstrong, Archibald, Anderson, Brown, Hampton, Ing, Maclvor, McKay, Sterling, Wilhelmson, and Young. Haig-Brown and Ross have also been 10 inspirational in their research and writing about Native communities and social issues. The pattern of voices and images in the study remind me of an album quilt with appliques of "thoughtfulness" that Heidegger (1962) "described as a minding, a heeding, a caring attunernent" (van Maneri, 1990, p. 12). van Manen describes phenomenological research as a "poetizing activity" (p.13). "What we must do is discover what lies at the ontological core of our being. So that in the words, or perhaps better, in spite of the words, we find "memories' that paradoxically we never thought or felt before" (p.13). While listening to and reading the words of the different participant voices in this study, I encourage readers to also reflect oh their own search for meaning in a more primal sense that invokes self-discovery through mind, body, emotions, and spirit. * * * * * * * * Remembering Voices a child, then, age six learning to readpressed butterfly wings ~ on a quilted field of favorite friends spread across myparents' well-made bed\ i crept up, time and again, to cross the breadth of years to hear stories of women my mother knew in dorms at college, where hearts grew fond, minds lingered. and we'd pause, our spirits entwined within a spring green border, my finger tracing each indelible stitch memorizing sounds, letter by letter sent as a name embroidered in fine black thread breathing on wings of floralprint. 11 "where is she now?" i wanted to know, "does she have children, cattle, kittens in the hay?" then, we'd read together Eunice, Ivy, Rita, Jean, Anne, Pauline, and others, too. butterflies mirroring real lives migrating in four directions, unforgettable women joined together on identical quilts across a dreamy bed somewhere floating in my imagination. i remember, too, watching their narratives smile in my mother's eyes butterflies dancing on air. * * * * * * * * The process of bringing diverse theoretical strands together, including critical ethnography (Thomas 1993) in a very peripheral sense, has been done deliberately to harmonize with the quality of self-reflective oral and written narratives. If strands of theory and practice can be imagined as small, yet significant, visible threads that bind the reflective methods of the research study together, then their necessary part(s) of the project enhance the larger patterns of image and voice that create material wholeness for the dissertation. Such a research method "must include an experiential analysis of the researcher's own process and have integrated personal narrative throughout the paper" (Hampton, p. 273). The organic nature of coming to voice is primarily a process of becoming visible, memorable, and contributing to the larger community. Exploring Representations of Reality In Chapter 4, summaries provide plot outlines of the television stories used in my research study. There are four stories from North of 60 and each one was edited to approximately 20 minutes in length. These fictional stories, situated in a northern Native community of Lynx River, create the focus for analysis and reflection. Because sites of conflict arise from personal, cultural, social, and political differences, it was important that both native and non-native students be involved in the study to hear each other's perspectives on issues of every day life. I am grateful to Atlantis and Alliance Atlantis Productions for their support of this project. To understand how this research study progressed, it is necessary to appreciate the value of "sharing personal narratives yet linking that knowledge with academic information [that] really enhances our capacity to know" (hooks, 1994, p.148). Participants who were not accustomed to working in groups were exposed to shared learning through discussion and analysis of the television stories. Chapters 5, 6, and 7 highlight the oral and written responses of the research participants. The 22 adult literacy learners who shared their stories in discussions, reflective writing, and taped interviews were also learning skills in teleliteracy. Typically, human interaction with television texts is described as viewing, watching, looking at, or surfing; however, I prefer "reading" as an appropriate term to express an activity distinguished by exercising analytical skills for the purpose of studying elements of story. Language has power and 13 focussed viewing or critical watching does not denote my intended purpose for selecting television stories as texts in adult literacy. Fiske (1987) uses the terms viewers and readers interchangeably but claims that" "reading' is common to all texts" (p. 17). Although Fiske refers to "viewing" and "reading" from a theoretical perspective relating to "popular cultural capital" (p. 19), semiotics, and competing ideologies, I extend the terms "viewing" and "reading" to include human interpretation of body language. "Viewing" describes an objective, detached recognition of a gesture, for example, that may remain at a surface level whereas "reading" occurs when a subjective response induces a deep reflection on the possible meaning and intent of the gesture. In other words, I am suggesting that a greater degree of analysis and comprehension is required to read a text, including a living text in progress, than view a text. de Kerckhove (1995) writes, "When we read, we scan the books, we are in control. But when we watch TV, it is the TV scanner that "reads' us. Our retinas are the direct object of the electron beam. When scanning meets glancing, and makes eye contact between man and machine, the machine's glance is the more powerful" (p. 14). de Kerckhove shifts from humans reading texts to machines reading humans. His provocative opinion caused me to monitor my relationship as an object to another, allegedly more powerful object. In order to make eye contact as discerning subjects, it is necessary to acquire skills in teleliteracy. 14 Locating Meaning in Three Voices The overlays and interweaving of three voices—theorists, researcher, and participants—include memories of specific situations, epiphanies, and dialogues that draw from past knowledge and lived experiences. To assist readers of the dissertation, I have used different fonts to signal a change of voice. While I have used the computer font "Book Antiqua 12" for the main body of text as well as the transcribed fragments from my interviews with the participants, the same font in italics signals my poetry, dream fragments, and researcher reflections. The participants' writing is in "Lucinda Handwriting 11". Documenting the voices of adult literacy learners, both oral and written, has been a process of connecting their stories and mine together to illuminate images of partners in learning. Words quilted together "make artful statements about the [literacy learners'] ache for colourful coherence" (Nadelstern & Hancock, 1988, p. 2) as they struggle with the incoherencies of oral and written expression. For the study participants' writing sample, I chose the topic, "What colour was your weekend?" not realizing at the time how fitting the topic would become as I pieced individual stories together into a thesis album. Each scrap of memory adds texture, colour, and shape to a work in progress as single letters form words that string into sentences to produce stories. The effort for students acquiring literacy skills involves lifestyle changes that not only expand intellectual achievement but also emotional development. Added responsibilities require major adjustments in self-concept and personal 15 relationships. Decision-making and daily effort over an extended period of time feel monumental, and the higher the learner climbs, the more difficult the struggle, yet, with vision and strength, the quest for completion and fulfillment can be realized (Bopp et al, 1985, p. 65). Meeting the needs of diverse learners continues to challenge educators at every level. Western education has traditionally valued literacy and print texts as the standard measurement of academic competency. Discovering meaning through oral storytelling has gained prominence, again, through communication technologies. "With the technological advances of video, television and film our world has become a combined oral/literate/visual one" (Archibald, 1991, p.79). Although oral-based learners have been excluded from knowledge acquired by reading print texts, it is now possible for these individuals to select alternative pathways for information and knowledge acquisition. The use of television, video and film opens exciting possibilities for adult literacy learners by creating new access routes to the oral-literate world. Rationale for the Study Watching Versus Reading TV The act of viewing television as a source of relaxation or entertainment can be very passive. We sometimes speak of being mesmerized for hours by voices and images, yet feel little or no attachment to the information being processed despite close physical proximity to the television set. One key difference between oral texts spoken by an oral storyteller and oral texts spoken 16 inside a television set is that the former can elicit immediate feedback from the audience, whereas the latter has no direct contact to know how the audience has received the message. Thus, I believe that education has a responsibility to teach teleliteracy skills in order to "read" new information acquired from TV programs critically. The integration of past knowledge with new information must be active to initiate understanding of the messages that the majority of North Americans tune into daily. According to Lenox and Walker (1993), "information [by itself] is the manipulator of a passive mind; knowledge, on the other hand, is the liberator of an active intellect" (p. 315). The writers advocate 'information literacy' that is an acquired skill. "If we are to teach information literacy, we must teach students to question, sort, discriminate, select, and analyze the array of messages that are presented in traditional or electronic formats, and then to reassemble the parts into new and personally meaningful wholes" (p. 316). Whether information is packaged as media literacy, visual literacy, teleliteracy, or information literacy, an emphasis on multiple literacies expands the instructional focus to include not only print literacy but also a range of other literacies requiring particular skills and strategies. "It will require the analytic and reflective skills necessary to distill a broad range of discrete information products " (p. 314). Lenox and Walker make a distinction between the storage of information and the refinement of information. In the context of my research, the participants not only learn to read television stories but also reflect on what they have read in order to integrate information with past knowledge and lived experience. Adult literacy learners often learn in isolation from classmates, so the materials were selected to maximize accessibility for everyone who wanted to participate in the study. Although writing reflective responses to the stories was the main reason for the study, a participant's unwillingness or inability to write did not exclude him/her from being in the study. I believe that adult literacy communities grow in strength when everyone feels safe, welcome, and involved in group activities. Before elaborating further on the reasons for the study, I want to acknowledge the voices who inspired me-a cacophony of young, female voices wanting to have a say, to inject meaning, to debate conflict, to predict the next catastrophic event in tomorrow's episode of "The Young and the Restless". That is how my mornings began as a high school teacher in a contained classroom of group home girls who read more TV than books. We never actually read a soap opera together, but the morning ritual at the start of class included critiques based on who did what, when, where, why, and how, eventually leading to active engagement with curriculum-based programming. It is fair to say that "the girls" demanded that I find inclusive methods to teach language learning so "that learning is not merely about the acquisition of knowledge but also about the production of social practices which provide students with a sense of place, identity, worth, and value" (Giroux and Simon et 18 al. 1989, p. ix). Though I did not fully appreciate the value of non-curricular soap operas at the time, the words of Freire and Giroux resonate with meaning now. Critical pedagogy which is relevant and emancipatory "must incorporate aspects of popular culture as a serious educational discourse into the school curriculum" (p. ix). The soap opera phenomenon provided relevant material for discussing literary conventions and threaded us through a maze of North American social values. When the secondary level readers studied Shakespeare, all the students insisted on inclusion because "doing" Shakespeare gave students a certain status, an arrival point, to be ranked among the counted in education. The only way to accommodate everyone's desire to study A Midsummer Night's Dream was with the aid of a BBC production. Thus, my odyssey with TV in the classroom began. What surprised me about this initial experiment with TV readers whose competency in reading ranged from Grades 2 to 4 was that their reliance on oral language allowed a freedom to observe and analyze certain nuances of non-verbal messages between characters that seemed strangely overlooked by the competent, secondary level readers, as though print interfered somehow in the construction of meaning and complicated the interpretive process. Dependency on the written word to convey meaning may, I suspect, cause readers to focus on the complexities embedded in poetic language rather than images, moods, and tone of voice that provide another layer of information. Travelling as a navigator reading a map to arrive at the desired destination rather than a driver observing 19 the countryside is one analogy to describe the experience. The real benefit of using a visual text, however, was fostering inclusivity in a language classroom of diverse learners. Providing Equal Access to Literacy In adult literacy classrooms, too, the need for inclusivity and relevant materials from popular culture is crucial, in my view. Skill development in teleliteracy can be introduced in much the same way as print literacy. Readers are concerned with plot, setting, characters, and theme. Through guided reading and discussion, they improve their skills in active listening, prediction, foreshadowing, inferencing, thinking/reflecting aloud, problem solving. They also learn to interpret, analyze, and synthesize information. In addition, readers increase their ability to recognize codes of representation, camera angles, lighting, music, and sound effects as conventions of television texts. A major objective in working with adult literacy learners is to facilitate the process of critical thinking and self-advocacy so that the learners become their own agents of change. In the opinion of Evans and Nation (1989), " Critical reflection is the process through which human beings use their analytical powers to assess elements in their lives against their explanatory frameworks (theories) . . . [and] is a precursor to change because, through the recognition of human agency, it encourages people to seek to improve their lives" (p. 10). Therefore, I believe a role of the teacher must be to provide opportunities for students to develop a sense of agency in becoming part of the literate community. For skill 20 development to occur, the learning tools must be relevant and accessible to the students' abilities. Television as an educational tool provides easy access to language learning for most adult literacy students. Television has not typically been mandated in adult literacy curricula as a method for easing the transition from illiteracy to print texts and writing. Hadas (1962) recommends that "all who take education seriously in its larger sense—and not the professed critics alone—should talk and write about television as they do about books" (cited in Bianculli, 1992, p.142). The possible benefits of building connections between storied lives on television and in print readers have not been widely recognized in adult literacy programs. Len Masterman (1993) suggests that teachers feel de-centred by media, since they are no longer perceived as experts. The likelihood of an individual teacher being perceived as an expert is lessened when he or she is situated among a student group of popular culture fans. Masterman says that "information which was around in the media studies classroom were being provided by the media themselves. They were communicating it laterally rather than hierarchically, speaking across rather than down to their audiences" (p. 10). This lateral sharing between a teacher and the students is made possible by the accessibility of information delivered orally and visually. The content selected for the research study offered an opportunity for adult literacy students to dialogue with me about elements of story—characters, plot, setting, theme—that apply to both print and non-print texts. 21 Another reason for focussing my research on television stories is to respond to increasing concern about the impact of television subject matter on our societal values and beliefs. Fleckenstein (1996) writes, "an image reconstructs a culture and a self" (p. 921). As a global audience, it is important to be cognizant of the process by which that reconstruction takes place and what implications the changes have on body, mind, and spirit. In a news article on violence in young people's lives, Johnson (2001) reports that, According to the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Media and Public Affairs, the average 12-year-old has seen 8,000 murders and 100,000 acts of violence on network television. . . . The effects of media violence on young people are measurable and long-lasting, according to a joint statement issued last year by the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Psychological Association, and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, (p. 17) Educators, in my opinion, share responsibility with the general public in questioning the quality of television programming, and at the same time, sensitizing ourselves and adults we teach about the potential, negative impact that some television programs have on our understanding of self and others in the world. Increasingly, emotional desensitization, callous attitudes, and normalization of aggression in home, school, and community contexts should be addressed through curricula at every level, including adult literacy. In my experience, teleliteracy does not devalue print literacy or diminish the importance of learning to read print. Skills acquired for decoding the texts of 22 our times on television simply provide additional tools for language skill development. Research Questions 1) How does the use of television as text affect an adult literacy student's ability to transfer oral texts into print texts? The idea of using television stories in adult literacy originated while I was teaching special needs students at the secondary level. While Observing the group's response, I realized that there may be several advantages for bringing an oral/ visual text to their language learning experience: accessibility, inclusivity, exposure to literary terms and conventions, critical thinking, active listening and "reading" rather than "watching" oral/visual texts. With a high attrition rate in adult literacy, I wondered if participants would attend the workshops, and if so would they come in holiday mode as a source of entertainment to escape from the real work of reading print texts? Depending on attitude, the research participants might complete their worksheets and participate in the discussions but not submit a written response. I speculated on reasons for not writing: poor comprehension, lack of time, no incentive without a mark, disinterest in the story, lethargy, resistance, inability to write, boredom, illness. (The interview session following the workshops was added, in part, to give the participants who submitted little or no writing an opportunity to discuss their reasons.) 23 Also, I wanted to see if the quality of writing changed over time. If a participant's writing increased in quantity or improved in quality, what factors influenced his/her ability to improve? This would require probing. Would oral-based learners learn skills in oral analysis and interpretation without transferring these skills into written responses? I wondered if writing decreased or varied in length and substance what causes might be determined. For example, personal interest in a story or identification with a character might inspire a participant to write more. The range of language competency varies in adult literacy programs, yet all participants received the same worksheets. Choice of language might be easy for some to read but difficult to impossible for others. Although the texts were accessible/even for the second language learners, the worksheets could provide an indication of variations in participants' reading levels. Therefore, the ability of a participant to comprehend a story and articulate his/her interpretations orally might not result in any transfer to print texts if print was inaccessible. 2) How does brainstorming influence written responses? It was decided after the pilot project to include brainstorming as an intervention to examine how/ if participants use written language recorded on an overhead projector by the researcher in their reflective written responses to the stories. Applied as a pre-writing strategy, brainstorming is a ''learning technique involving open group discussion intended to expand the range of available ideas" (Harris and Hodges, 1995, p. 22) and, for the purpose of this study, to 24 build vocabulary. First, I wanted to evaluate whether or not this strategy would actually stimulate writing. Second, I predicted that writing would increase as a result of brainstorming and new vocabulary would be included in the responses as well. I hoped to see evidence of reflective thinking as a result of sharing ideas and diverse perspectives, depending on the lived experiences of the participants. 3) What factors contributed to reflective writing through the use of television as text in an adult literacy context? This question stems from my observations as an adult literacy instructor that variables exist between the instructor and student(s) as well as within group dynamics. Possible factors include individual personality and inherent nature, degree of security and openness, emotional climate in the classroom, familiarity with classmates, level of confidence in the development of voice, cultural background. I wondered about gender difference in terms of intuitive and spiritual aspects of reflective learning. Is class a positive or negative influence or totally irrelevant? After four workshops, I hoped to show my stance as a reflective practitioner had motivated at least some participants to include reflective responses in their writing? Overview of the Study The decision to use texts from the Canadian television series North of 60 was based, in part, on personal interest. I had been studying aboriginal literature for my Master's Degree and wanted to continue using texts dealing with native stories. The Canadian setting in a northern native community provides contrasts 25 of human settlement in close relation to the natural world. Native and non-native characters wrestle with contemporary social issues and reveal cultural differences in systems of community leadership, justice, family relations, housing, transportation, health and rehabilitation, business, economic survival, entertainment, and spirituality. Education is based on the teachings of Elders, and the absence of schools, teachers and books is notable. In preparation for the research, I completed an application for the Ethical Review Committee that was approved as submitted. For the first phase, I conducted a pilot project that has been included in the dissertation as Chapter 5: Site One. Prior to the larger study at Sites Two and Three, I submitted a second application to the Ethical Review Committee that was approved as submitted. Copies of the letters of permission for the pilot project and the main research study (Appendix A.l, A.2) had to be signed for a student to participate in the research study. Although the pilot project had a slightly different format, the basic methodology remained the same for it and the main research study. Prior to the workshops, I visited the sites to inform potential participants of the purpose of the study/answer questions, provide permission letters for those who wanted to participate, and distribute a survey of 12 questions (Appendix B.l) relating to television, such as individual interest, favorite programs, estimated time spent per week, and reasons for watching television. The responses were anonymous. All potential participants filled out a survey, but not everyone signed a consent 26 form or became involved in the study. The results of the survey (Appendix B.2) and analysis of the responses (Appendix B.3) follow the survey questions. I visited six education sites prior to conducting research at three institutions. At one institution, two potential sites existed; however, only one site was selected (see pp. 35-6). Site One was a university college adult upgrading program in which six of the research participants were immigrant second language learners and five were non-native English-speaking Canadians. Site Two was a community college career preparation program. The participants included four native Canadians, one non-native English-speaking Canadian, and three second language learners. Site Three was a Native community and the three participants on site were local to the community and all native Canadians. With written permission from Alliance Television that later amalgamated to became Alliance Atlantis Productions, I edited four texts to provide a linear story-line for each session that focussed on a specific theme. The edited segments were approximately 20 minutes in length. Since many participants were unfamiliar with the Canadian television series, North of 60, it was necessary to provide background information relevant to the story, such as a recent marriage or a death. The four segments from different episodes were shown twice: first, for a general overview of the issues, and second, for a group discussion; however, on one occasion at Site Three, there was only time to read the story once, followed by brainstorming and group discussion. 27 Presentation of the workshops for the pilot project and the main study were similar. As a pre-reading strategy, the participants responded in writing to a question provided by the researcher that related to the theme or plot. Responses were shared and then set aside for later comparison to see if their assumptions and ideas before reading the story changed after reviewing facts and details of the situation. I provided the characters' names and any relevant background information that might have been revealed in a previous episode. Participants read the story twice. The first time, I showed the entire story segment without a pause, whereas the second time, I paused the tape several times to clarify a point, note special effects, discuss symbolic meaning, ask questions, and highlight literary terms, such as foreshadow, climax, or point of view. After the first showing, the participants discussed the main idea, important facts, the plot development, and relationship between characters. Although most participants in the pilot project recorded information on a worksheet as their classmates commented on the story, I did not record any vocabulary. The procedure differed slightly for the main study since the researcher recorded vocabulary from the brainstorming session on an overhead for the participants to copy. When the participants had read the story a second time, they added details that had been missed the first time and discussed social issues raised in the plot. At Site One, a worksheet (Appendix D.l) was provided to record ideas during the large group discussion. If someone asked for a definition or spelling 28 of a word, I wrote the information on a blackboard, but otherwise any writing on the worksheet was recorded independently. I facilitated discussions, but the participants assumed responsibility for constructing meaning and reflecting on the story's message. In Chapter 5, the reflective written responses by nine of the 11 participants at Site One and 11 interview fragments are included together with my interpretations and reflections. The pilot project had neither a writing sample (Appendix C) nor formal brainstorming strategies to encourage the use of new vocabulary in the written responses. At Sites Two and Three, I requested a writing sample during my first meeting with potential participants. After discussing the timeframe and requirements of the study, each person was given 30 minutes to write on the topic, "What colour was your weekend?" Each person wrote a spontaneous, stream of consciousness response to the topic. I have included the writing sample of each participant from Site Two in Chapter 6 and Site Three in Chapter 7 along with a selection of each participant's written response to a television story. None of the research participants at Sites Two and Three had been exposed to bramstorming in a group prior to the study. Following the second showing of the story at Sites Two and Three, the participants formed small groups to share their views and complete a worksheet (Appendix D.2,.3,.4,.5). Both the worksheet and written reflections were submitted to the researcher as data for analysis of the progress achieved over the 4-week period. 29 Each of the four workshops was approximately 2 hours in length with a short break at half time at Sites One and Three whereas workshops at Site Two were continuous for the full 2 hours. Taking a break was optional as some of the participants experienced difficulty focussing for an extended period of time. Because of time constraints, one session at Site Three was approximately one and one-half hours, in which case a break was unnecessary. Participants in both the pilot project and the main research study had some experience with reader response journals or comprehension question and answer exercises of print texts, so similar strategies for active listening, prediction, guided reading and discussion, thinking/ reflecting aloud, and written responses were applied to reading and analyzing television stories in much the same way as print stories. As well, participants at Sites Two and Three discussed literary conventions of setting, plot development, theme, and characterization. Individual interviews were held after the final workshop at which time participants had an opportunity to express their thoughts and reflect on personal responses to specific situations raised in the texts. As well, there were six interview questions for participants in the pilot project (Appendix E.l) which were reduced to five questions (Appendix E.2) for the second phase of research. Often, participants responded with personal stories that were either directly connected to one of the television stories or held special meaning for the reader. Mishler (1986) identifies a dilemma I experienced while interviewing. 30 We are more likely to find stories reported in studies using relatively unstructured interviews where respondents are invited to speak in their own voices, allowed to control the introduction and flow of topics, and encouraged to extend theirresponses. Nonetheless respondents may also tell stories in response to direct, specific questions if they are not interrupted by interviewers trying to keep them to the "point." (p. 69) Participants were invited to select their favorite story to discuss their response and this portion of the interview process gleaned the most reflective, personally meaningful responses. My reflections on the interview process are discussed in Chapter 8. Interviews were approximately 20 minutes in length. They were held in a separate room from the classroom. For the pilot project, all interviews were audiotaped. Participants for the interviews of the main research study were given the option of being videotaped or audiotaped. At Site Two, two participants requested an audiotape while the others were videotaped. I videotaped all interviews at Site Three. When videotaping, I also activated an audiotape at Site Two, but forgot my tape recorder for the interviews at Site Three. Thus, I transcribed directly from the videotape for the last site but used a dictaphone to transcribe interviews from the other two sites. I transcribed all interviews in full. Selection of Participants Variables affecting the selection of participants consisted of a) the student population in terms of class size, regular attendance, estimated attrition rate, 31 interest in the project, b) cooperation of the instructor, c) time considerations to complete the study at each site d) permission from the institution, e) adherence to the university's Ethical Review Committee requirements, and f) transportation feasibility for the researcher. Elaboration follows: a) Since the television stories chosen for the research study were located in a Native community, my objective was to have a balanced representation of voices between native and non-native participants. About half of the participants were either status or non-status native people. Other students have been identified in subsequent chapters as non-native second language learners or non-native Canadian English speakers. Depending on the program, class size really varied from place to place. A preferred location would have approximately 10 potential participants to begin the research. I succeeded in obtaining 11 participants for the pilot project, but the other sites were smaller: Site Two - 8 participants; Site Three - 3 participants. In two prospective classrooms in which the number of participants would have been 15+ in each situation, I was unable to proceed with my research for several reasons which will be explained under the subheading, Ethical Concerns, (see pp. 33-37). b) At the sites where the research study were held, the instructors were enthusiastic and cooperated fully in the project by providing space, time, and arrangements for technical equipment. Instructors took part in individual ways according to their schedules. One worked with students in another part of the classroom with those not involved in the study; she would occasionally look up or make a comment and once assisted as a scribe. Another participated in some workshops and used the spare time for preparation and marking on other days. A third instructor left for the majority of the workshops and went to another building, so I had no close involvement with her and limited observation of her contact with the participants except during arrival and departure times. c) As the research study occupied a minimum of 10 hours of class time, this became a consideration for students who were attempting to meet a completion date for acceptance in another work preparation program. Some advanced upgrading students who needed to accumulate credits expressed interest in the study but did not want to commit time to an unmarked project. At one site, insufficient time due to unforeseen scheduling changes resulted in cancellation of the study after the second workshop. Another site could only provide a room for 1 hour on the day and time available for interested students, but I needed two hours for each workshop; hence, the prospective site had to be cancelled due to lack of physical space within the institution. In one instance, I agreed at the request of the institution to give 10 hours of volunteer time after the completion of my research study. This requirement has not been fulfilled yet, although I did contact the institution. d) Two out of three institutions gave immediate formal permission to host a research project. For the third one, I submitted a proposal to the Board that was approved. A group of instructors at a fourth institution requested a pre-study presentation, but their schedules could not accommodate a 10-hour study so whether or not the institution would have given permission is unknown. e) In all cases, I adhered to the requirements of the Ethical Review Committee. This strict compliance meant that I was unable to conduct research at one potential site due to the instructor's insistence that a mark be assigned for student participation in the study. f) During the main research project, I depended on public transportation. Travel time averaged two hours per visit at Sites One and Two. For Site Three, I required three buses with various wait times, up to an hour, so the actual travel time averaged three hours per visit. Although I expressed interest and inquired about travelling to a rural setting or smaller community, no offers to host a study were received. Ethical Concerns A primary concern has been to honour the voices of the participants by neither silencing nor denying them the right to be heard while ensuring their confidentiality. I acknowledge their experiences with empathy and respect. It should be no surprise to readers of this dissertation that forms of abuse exist at every level of education. To hear a few of the unheard voices, representing multitudes of children and adults who have survived inexcusable wrongs, calls educators to reflect on the meaning of professional ethics. The participants' stories create the core of our partnership in research for it is their images and 34 voices that I hope educators will remember, van Manen (1990) writes about restoration to a state of wholeness in the following passage. And so any text that may teach us something about the depthful character of our pedagogic nature is bound to aim for a certain hermeneutic: reaching for something beyond, restoring a forgotten or broken wholeness by recollecting something lost, past, or eroded, and by reconciling it in our experience of the present with a vision of what should be. This kind of text cannot be summarized. To present research by way of reflective text is not to present findings, but to do a reading (as a poet would) of a text that shows what it teaches. One must meet with it, go through it, encounter it, suffer it, consume it and, as well, be consumed by it. (p. 153) A concern of mine is that readers may not take the time to internalize what we need to be ethically concerned about. Are we reaching for or resigned to something beyond? Do we reflect on the texts our students tell with care or indifference? How ethical is indifference, anyway? van Manen states that "indifference is the failure to recognize the other human being in a genuine encounter or personal relation. Indifference is a failure or crises of the 'we' " (p. 108). Throughout the study, the different voices raise awareness of the sacred space we occupy in classrooms as partners in learning. -One of my gods was to create sufficient distance for the participants to critique stereotypes and images of disadvantage yet engage them in discussion to envision their own realistic possibilities for social change. Therefore, I chose television stories that reveal "the experience of lived difference as an agenda for discussion and a central resource for a pedagogy of possibility" (Giroux and 35 Simon, et al. 1989, p. 23). Such a pedagogy encourages the learner's empowerment. However, the opposite can occur. Giroux and Simon write: Sometimes when students and teachers engage in a critique of existing social practices or forms of knowledge, a feeling of powerlessness comes over the group. Doing critical pedagogy can turn an educational setting into a council of despair. How can we guard against the production of hopelessness when taking up an agenda of critique and social analysis? Given all the limitations of teaching and schooling, how Can we effectively empower people (Aronowitz and Giroux 1985, Simon 1987; McLaren 1986)? (p. 232) The possibility that images of oppression, poverty, and violence could reinforce the participants' feelings of resignation to what exists in terms of real social conditions of everyday life, rather than enhance their resilience to strive for change and, thereby, transform their lives was/is a concern of mine. Although my research positioned me within relations of power that contribute to systemic disadvantage, I regard my commitment as an educator to be directed not only toward empowerment of the disadvantaged but also empowerment of the advantaged to reflect on the voices in positions of authority who are actively committed to social change. From my perspective, silence on the part of the majority of advantaged on issues of oppression, injustice, and violence within our schools and institutions of higher learning creates a vacuum, and this has far-reaching ethical concerns. Also, maintaining professional boundaries between institutions, the researcher, and individual instructors can create ethical challenges. In order not to jeopardize my autonomy as a researcher, I realized that becoming a "team member" with instructors could be problematic. In one situation, the planned study collapsed when I was unable to satisfy both the team's agenda to attach a participation mark and meet the ethical requirements set by my university. Finally, when I agreed to give 10 hours of equal time as a volunteer at an institution following the completion of my research but was unable to establish contact with the person who handled volunteer services, it felt uncomfortable breaking a promise I had made as a condition of receiving permission to conduct research at the institution. In summary, the television stories raise public awareness of moral and ethical concerns, and the research participants express opinions and think reflectively about problems that occur in real life. The plurality of voices invite educators to enter into the dialogue, not as experts but as learners gaining new insights. Quigley (1997) writes, "In my experience, many teachers (and administrators) become uncomfortable when the more "sordid' details of the learner's past or present life are revealed [and subscribe] to the popular perspective to keep a certain distance from the learners' reality" (p. 108). From personal experience both as a student and faculty member, I concur that Quigley's experience resonates with truth. After a student dies, unable to cope with escalating harassment and bullying, issues surrounding the suicide reveal that individuals in authority knew of the situation but ignored the student's sense of isolation and fear. Not that I discount the pressures of teaching that are daunting, but experiencing contempt and indifference from the advantaged who 37 are in close contact with a student can be devastating for that student if he/ she is dealing with a real or perceived life-threatening situation. I know there is reticence to bring images that represent reality into the classroom, and some will argue that silencing and/or denial protects social disorder. Yet, voices who break through the silence "(for example, Aronowitz and Giroux, 1991; Welch, 1990),... maintain that we now face exciting opportunities to envision and build more multicultural, diverse systems in society and in education that will reflect the complexity of the world we have entered. Rather than embracing singular solutions or grand narratives (Harvey, 1989), we must now foster pluralism and new forms of empowerment" (Quigley, p. 22). The instabilities in the world that are presented as oral/ visual stories on a daily basis demand our ability to read and discuss a range of social issues that have a harmful impact on individuals and societies. Throughout my dissertation, readers will have an opportunity to probe their own position on ethical issues raised in both fictional and real situations. CHAPTER 2: BACKGROUND OF THE RESEARCHER We are a story we like to tell. - Roger Schank Belonging. One motivator of literacy education stems from a longing to participate fully as a literate person in a literate community. Personal, family, work, and social status are reasons for wanting to acquire or improve literacy skills. I first became active in literacy through tutoring refugees and volunteering time in a low-income housing project. Since language learning included speaking, I encouraged storytelling and felt profoundly enriched by the cultural stories as trust developed during tutoring sessions. To belong, a human needs a welcoming environment. Even if a person migrates to unfamiliar territory, a sense of home and belonging is basic to well-being in body, mind, and spirit. It has taken many years of building partnerships in learning to realize that the need to belong has deep, deep roots, and when I examine the highs and lows of my education, the lows have blessed me with empathy as I connect in mind and heart with students of any age who override exceptionalities to achieve their goals, and the highs have given me vision, hope, and perseverance when others more capable than I might have given up. I am grateful for the opportunities to teach and learn. Why teachers gravitate to the profession and what influences form their pedagogical stance would be a fascinating study. During a conversation, a colleague remarked that everyone knows teachers become teachers to be boss. 39 Being boss had never occurred to me, anymore than a dahlia would want to be boss in a rose garden. I reflected on how different motivations for becoming a teacher has an impact on classroom dynamics and how perception of others changes depending on how a teacher positions him/her self in relation to the students. In literacy, I often feel that the teacher/learner relationship goes back and forth and each person speaks from their centre of being. No one sits in the margin. We are valued as different equals worthy of respect and reverence. Student-centred learning, empowerment, partnership, equality, and fairness are important concepts that guide my teaching principles and practices. Background Influences My preschool years were spent on a dairy farm in southern Ontario. To return to early lived experiences is significant as a researcher of adult literacy because it is through past knowledge and lived experiences that we make meaning in the present. The past acts as a template for replicating and renewing our patterns of interaction in a learning situation. For me, the first day of school became synonymous with loss. I have written about transforming loss in adult literacy learners because failure and loss, not success and gain, in school is a common denominator in literacy classrooms. During graduate studies, I have explored power relations in my own school experiences that began on the first day of Grade One with feelings of disconnection, alienation, and loss. A photo taken on that first day of school shows a girl wearing a white blouse, a plaid pleated skirt, white socks, and black shoes. She is clutching a 40 lunch pail. Using third person singular objectifies the self captured in a photo who just the day before was a carefree child, the me I love to remember, flying through fields of clover in overalls and bare feet and hair with burrs like spaniels ears. The girl-in-a-skirt day proved to be an abrupt beginning-and-end day that has been obliterated from my memory. Evidently, the school trustees held a meeting and decided that the one-room school just down the road from our family farm could not accommodate one more desk, so my first day consisted of being turned away not only from school, but also from a way of life. Rather than forcing a five-year-old to walk alone several miles along a sparsely populated main highway, up a treacherously steep hill, past a gravel pit, and farther still to the other one-room rural school, my parents packed me away to live with an aunt and uncle in a town with multi-room schools until other arrangements could be made. I have surreal memories of that year: big boys leapfrogging over me, their hands pressing on my head, getting lost on strange streets, vomitting in the cloakroom, creating an awkward situation for my sweet, gentle teacher who meant no harm. The year ended badly, in failure, and a permanent branding as "one year older than normal' for my grade. Clearly, my emphasis on belonging and building community in adult literacy classrooms originates at a primal level from those early introductions to school. Gradually, school became tolerable though I wanted my braids cut so no one could see my ears turn scarlet when the teacher asked me a question. However, introversion in childhood became an advantage as a reflective teacher 41 and researcher. Social justice grew from my awareness of struggle. In grade school, we had spelling bees. One day, I asked a friendless girl in smelly, ragged clothes to be on my team because she usually waited until all the other students had been selected by the team leaders. Though she attended class irregularly and moved after a few months, she was my first teacher of compassion and equality. Her name was Constance. In junior high, friends launched me into political activism on the students' council. These were the best years: grades six, seven, and eight. I participated in sports, fund raising, art, music, school dances. If peer pressure existed, I wasn't aware of it. A tin box holds a stack of awards, and on top, a note from an art teacher with the words "an asset in class". At home, I fed my soul with music, practising piano three hours a day. Evelyn Lau articulates in Runaway, a kind of authoritarian, emotionless parenting I can relate to. My body stayed home, caressing the piano keys with passion and sensitivity, but my heart was a runaway in search of acceptance. The teachers loomed large as surrogate guardians of my pubescent world and in their care, I thrived. Then, in high school, loss broke my stride. Although my marks soared to the honour roll, a low IQ score prompted a guidance counselor to recommend that I transfer from academic to commercial courses. "You're not smart enough for university," the counsellor said. My family trusted his authority. With hopes dashed forever of being a high school music teacher, I stayed one more year, 42 giving a solo performance of the Warsaw Piano Concerto before quitting school and enrolling in secretarial college. * * * * * * * * In tundra spirit grows resilience lichen welded on stone. * * * * * * * * As an adult, I found it hard to believe that no one from the school phoned my parents to discuss with them why I dropped out of school; however, while teaching high school, a Grade 10 student wrote in a note that I had been the first teacher who had ever helped him deal with problems that had slowed his learning since early childhood. Then I understood why no one bothered to inquire about my withdrawal. Subjects in texts receive more respect than objects in desks. As a school counsellor/music teacher, who had a choice to empower or disempower, he chose the latter position rather than act as a mentor. I later learned from a former teacher at the same school, that his prejudicial attitudes that I interpret as insecurities and ignorance prevented him from thinking clearly. What happened to me, apparently, had nothing to do with a low IQ score. For the average educator who experiences few, if any, academic failures, I emphasize the tenet "never assume". Never assume your influence stops at the 43 classroom door, never assume that disability or exceptionality is an insurmountable barrier to academic success, never assume that knowledge is true, never assume that an expert is right. When an educator chooses to impede rather than enhance learning, for whatever reasons, a student's loss is a society's loss. * * * * * * * * Where does the illiterate child in the adult body go when the adidt learns to read? Why in the silence does no one speak out if hurt freezes the child's mind? * * * * * * * * Renewing a Tourney in Education As I spread out this album quilt of research participants and myself, the similar patterns of life experience that stitch us together include, on the one hand, marital breakdown, welfare, single parenthood, poverty; absence of extended family, low-income jobs, unemployment, insecurity, isolation, health problems, transience, stress, loss of self-worth. On the other hand, we share the warmth of survival instincts, resilience, sensitivity, insight, healing, strength, truthfulness, determination, resistance, endurance, openness to change. It takes more strength of character to survive oppression than to inflict it. 44 When my two children were in school, I returned to a regular high school as an adult student to complete Grade 12. I felt so scared the first day with one other adult student in one of the three classes. For three months, she and I never spoke. Teacher-centred instruction allowed students to remain isolated. We eventually became friends, but this experience probably instilled in me the need to approach adult literacy classrooms as a place for building community rather than leaving individuals to remain as islands unto themselves. After graduation, I worked as a secretary for another five years. On a bleak day, our family physician urged me to try one course at university since failure was no longer an unknown to fear. He, too, had received dire predictions for his future prospects by a school counsellor and considered returning to his alma mater after interning as an M.D. with a "so you thought I would amount to nothing, eh?". For the next five years, working and studying part-time while raising teenagers kept me intensely busy, earning a four-year degree in five years. In 1985,1 graduated with a Bachelor of Arts Degree from the University of Victoria and moved to Ottawa where I enrolled in a graduate diploma course in International Relations which created unanticipated challenges: French and Math. I left after the first year and returned to work as a secretary during the day and an adult literacy instructor in the evening. With both children in university, I was able in 1988 to enroll in a Teacher Education Program at the 45 University of Ottawa and graduated as a secondary school teacher with first-class honours. From 1988 to 1991,1 taught secondary level Special Needs and English during the day and continued to teach adult literacy students in the evenings. The resistances and rebellions of my day students were balanced by the highly motivated and appreciative evening students. A large percentage of both day and evening students were second language learners, so I specialized in Special Needs and English as a Second Language for three summers and winters in my spare time. It was during this time that the advantages of television as a resource for multi-level language classes came to my attention. In 1991,1 decided to devote my teaching energies exclusively to my secondary students, but it was a difficult decision to leave literacy work. The frenetic pace of 12-14 hour days, intensive individualized programming for special needs students, and the death of a respected colleague prompted me to take a leave of absence and return to university for a Master's Degree. From 1992 to 1994,1 studied Canadian and Aboriginal Literature for a Master's in English from Carleton University. My thesis on Aboriginal Literature focussed on spirituality as a site of resistance and renewal in works by N. Scott Momaday, Leslie Marmon Silko, and Jeannette Armstrong. While writing my thesis, a cousin informed me that our maternal grandmother was mixed blood, and our great grandmother a full-blood native woman. The revelation explained a lot about my mother whom I loved and admired but never really knew. Her 46 repression went fathoms deep through her adult life, living in a religious void with chronic depression, fear of alcoholism, drug dependency, and silence about her family. On one occasion, she expressed shame about her ancestry without elaborating and felt that her life had been wasted. Denial of ethnicity resulted in a denial of self and an inability to feel safe or speak her own truth from the heart. When I graduated from high school as an adult, I realized the depth of her alienation for she neither recalled that I had dropped out of school as a teenager nor offered congratulations. Reflecting on my mother's life, so gifted with intelligence and talent, I have a better understanding of why she denied her self in order to survive, yet no one can escape from history. Anderson (2000) writes: Many Native cultures teach that we carry the memories of our ancestors in our physical being. As such, we are immediately connected to those who have gone before us. We live with the trauma that has plagued the previous generations. We know their laughter, but also their sorrows, (p. 24-5) When people feel forced to hide their identity, a schizoid dismembering of self is created. One rainy morning, a bird flew across my dreamtime, and I learned that my mother had gone to the spirit world. A rainbow spanned the highway as the family drove to the lake to set her spirit free by the shores she loved to visit near the land of her ancestors. In The Sacred Tree (Bopp et al, 1985), the authors explain the traditional teachings of the Medicine Wheel. The North is the sacred direction of death and rebirth which has special resonance when I reflect on my maternal connection to Native Spirituality. The final lesson of the North is the lesson of balance, for wisdom teaches how all things fit together. And balance, when applied to the interconnectedness of all human beings, becomes justice. Justice is the greatest gift of the North. With its aid, the traveler can see all things as they really are. Without it, there can be no peace or security in the affairs of the world. (Bopp et al, p. 71) As I find my own voice and reach out to students who search for their power within in order to overcome power over them, my capacity to share our stories as "the people" grows. What has happened to me in school could happen to anyone, and that is a sobering reality. Our humanity has not evolved, yet, to walk the talk of equality, inclusivity, and respect for the people, regardless of gender, race, or class. Researcher's Reflection Sometimes we turn a corner and come face to face with mystery. Such a moment came to me early in 1998. While leaving our departmental office, J looked into the steady gaze of a bird of prey not more than six feet from the doorway. Other than a few leaves rustling on the pavement between us, the courtyard had a hushed quality. The visitor stood her ground. It was I who felt startled, not knowing how to respond. We stared at each other for several seconds before she calmly bent to pick up a red berry in her beak; then, she glanced toward me again as she gently lifted her wings and flew to a nearby tree. She settled on a lower branch facing away from me. Slowly, not wanting to scare her a way, I moved along the path to get another look at this exquisite being. 48 Just as I neared the tree, two professors rushed headlong down a flight of stairs, their clatter causing Merlin to exit in haste. All I could do was call to the men, "Look at the bird, " as she flew over their heads. "Are you talking to crows, again?" one said. "No, "Ianswered with exasperation. "Look! Over there!" My hands waved frantically as both heads glanced back, but they were deep in conversation and brushed past I searched and compared size, colour, and markings in several bird books, before identifying the "visitor" as a female Merlin falcon. Merlin stayed with me, her tame demeanor and piercing stare, compelling me to look inward. Her physical presence confirmed she was real, yet I could not dismiss the coincidence of her appearance with other events. Although the reasons were unclear, fknew Merlin to be a spiritual being and that she had appeared for a reason. Her visit alerted me to a whole dimension of reality that did and did not make sense at the time, but my heart soared that day with fear and wonder as 1 watched her wing tips scroll messages across the Western sky until they became no more than a dot on the horizon. CHAPTER 3: REFLECTIVE RESEARCH METHODOLOGY * * * * * * * * Partners in Learning In the Messengers'landscape wing tips communicate with air grace soars on bounded space partners join in natural equality. Look to the east where Grandfather Sun opens each dawn reflecting on lessons delivered in dreamtime breath of life awakening. In the Messengers'landscape visions transform possibility, rites scroll through finitude trusting the knowledge of Father Sky. Look to the south where eagles spiral to the sea a dyad of talons lashed freefall through space hearts drumming with Mother Earth. In the Messengers' landscape harmony spins a mystical web quixotic connections to passion and fear responding to sacred power within. Look to the west • - • where songs sigh in cedar and breeze cradle nests of hopeful harmonies sing oh sing for creation. In the Messengers'landscape ancestral warriors offer protection whispering wisdom in feather and stone stories and ceremonies interlocking Look to the north where traditional teachings endure honouring oneness, all my relations gratitude to Grandmother Moon. Pathways to Reflective Research The poem Partners in Learning situates the learners in a relationship of trust with each other and connects them to the natural world while mutuality rather than inequality define the relations of power. Metaphorically, the eagle messengers both teach and learn as sacred intermediaries within the cosmos. As signifiers of high aspirations, they exhibit qualities of mind, body, and spirit that enhance survival by creating harmony and balance, independence and interdependence. The phenomenon of eagles scrolling through space, time, and transformation invites readers to reflect on their majesty and power. Their presence challenges human perspective, entering our consciousness to consider other ways of knowing. Drawing from values, beliefs, and experiences in native and non-native educational communities, my research methodology focusses on reflective learning. To ground myself as a researcher, I have participated in traditional Native ceremonies and spiritual practices. References to the earth, sky, sun, and moon acknowledge my dependence on them for survival. Positioned at the centre of the Medicine Wheel, the journey to the East is where beginnings emerge in harmony with natural phenomena. To study the teachings of this ancient symbol known to most native people in North America is a life-long process. Moving around the circle to the South, next to the West, and then to the North creates a continual cycle of being. Each direction signifies aspects of spiritual growth that are necessary for personal and social change. 51 Kirkness and Bamhart (1994) articulate principles of respectful research practices based on respect/relevance, reciprocity, and responsibility as "humanistic, culturally sensitive, inclusive terms" (p. 1). These Four R's were adapted by native educators and leaders at the First Nations House of Learning, University of British Columbia. Respect, relationship, responsibility, and reverence—the R's that Archibald, Maclvor, Wilhelmson, and Young (2001) developed into seminars and brought to my learning through the Longhouse Leadership Training Program—have been guiding principles of my reflective learning while conducting reflective research and recording the journey. Practitioners of Reflective Methods To apply reflective methods while researching the use of television in adult literacy, I reviewed available literature on reflective practice that provided a partial frame of reference. While other academic journeys in reflective learning created meaningful and valuable inspiration, the one individual whose words and work I most admire is Paulo Freire. His words leave imprints on my life as they articulate my understanding of personal responsibility and social justice. In Pedagogy of Freedom: Ethics, Democracy, and Civic Courage (1998), published after his death on May 2,1997, Freire writes: My voice is in tune with a different language, another kind of music. It speaks of resistance, indignation, and just anger of those who are deceived and betrayed. It speaks, too, of their right to rebel against the ethical transgressions of which they are the long-suffering victims, (p. 93) 52 The voices of my research participants speak from the centre as survivors in a language Freire understood. In reflective and emancipatory learning situations, the traditional role of the teacher as expert changes, so that "two learners who occupy somewhat different spaces in an ongoing dialogue" (Aronowitz in Freire, 1998, p. 8) bring knowledge to the relationship and teach each other. The following model (Figure 1) illustrates the interconnections that activated in the process of analyzing problem situations, gaining understanding of them, and working toward transformation. Figure 1. Reflective learning involves the mind, body, emotions, and spirit and acknowledges that a person's lived experience has a pivotal role in the transfer of information into knowledge. Naome Soleil © 2002 MODEL OF REFLECTIVE LEARNING 53 Emancipatory pedagogy requires a reflective analysis of how things are and how things could be otherwise, not only to gain an understanding of situations, but also to transform them. "In Freirean terms an essential prerequisite for dialogue is the educator's understanding of the vsituatedness' of the learners' discourse and of the capacity of teacher and learner to analyze and critique their daily reality in order to discover and exercise their capacity to transform it" (Modra, 1989, p. 128). Not only in educational contexts, but also in homes, communities, and around the globe, images of conflict and destruction confront us daily in the media. Yet, voices of respect and responsibility empower us to transform those painful images through our acknowledgement of the sacred connections we share with each other and all of creation. Dewey (1933) defines a reflective teacher as one who "emancipates us from merely impulsive and routine activity . . . enables us to direct our actions with foresight and to plan according to ends in view of purposes of which we are aware. It enables us to know what we are about when we act" (p. 17). I agree that educators risk self-imprisonment in daily routines of teacher tasks that leave inadequate time for reflecting on the relevance of the activities being presented as tools for learning specific skills. Selecting materials and planning strategies that bring a love of learning into a classroom establishes a base for meaningful interactions in a classroom. Whereas Dewey (1933) and Freire (1974) focus on the classroom as a site in which students experience personal growth and change through a process of 54 activity, questioning, and reflection on knowledge gained, Schon emphasizes reflection in teaching during lesson planning that he defines as reflection-on-actioir, or, when encountering an in-class situation that requires thinking on the spot as reflection-in-action; or, the knowledge that guides a teacher's practices in schools that refers to knowledge-in-action. These three categories of reflective practice emphasize mental processes but seem to exclude physical, emotional, and spiritual aspects. I appreciated one quote that locates professional practice on "high, hard ground" or swampy "messes." f In the varied topography of professional practice, there is a high, hard ground where practitioners can make effective use of research-based theory and technique, and there is a swampy lowland where situations are confusing "messes" incapable of technical solution. (Schon, 1983, p. 42) Since 1985 , my teaching experiences in confusing, swampy messes have proved to be a major source of inspiration for graduate research. The lowlands grow a variety of resilient learners who defy theories and challenge leaders in education to reflect deeply on the profound knowledge to be gained through listening and observing in a literate society. From Mezirow (1990), who makes the distinction between reflection and critical reflection, I learned the importance of including assumptions in my presentation of materials for the study participants. Before their first exposure to a story, the participants reflected on their assumptions about a central aspect of the story. These assumptions were further examined when problem-solving an issue since "challenging our established and habitual patterns of expectation, the 55 meaning perspectives with which we have made sense of our encounters with the world . . . can be blocked by external or internal constraints (or both), by situational and psychic factors, or simply by inadequate information or lack of skill to proceed" (p. 12). Mezirow explores critical reflection from multiple perspectives and distortions that influence an individual's capacity or openness to transform. Distortions are placed in three categories: epistemic, sociOcultural, and psychic. Under sociocultural distortion, Mezirow notes that "ideology is a form of prereflective consciousness, which does not question the validity of existing social norms and resists critique of presuppositions" (p. 16). Critical reflection contests the status quo and raises consciousness from a state of "social amnesia" to social action. Another interesting comment that "television has become a major force in perpetuating and extending the hegemony of mainstream ideology" (p. 16) heightened my observation of stereotypes, biases, and distortions in the television stories that became a natural extension of the reflective problem-solving activities taking place during the workshops. Changing Patterns in Reflective Learning An aspect of phenomenology integral to my research method is a focus on lived experience; however, I do not attempt in this study to reduce the experiences of 22 adult literacy participants to a central meaning or single "essence" (Cres well, 1998, p. 236). My emphasis adheres to the notion that "in phenomenological research description carries a moral force . . . [and] has, as its 56 ultimate aim, the fulfillment of our human nature: to become more fully who we are" (van Manen, p. 12). Since there is a clear distinction made between phenomenology and other research methods, I cannot claim to strictly conform to one particular research method. In so far as my research study is an inquiry process for understanding based on a reflective methodology exploring a social or human problem in the context of culture(s), there are elements of ethnography. The distinction made by Thomas (1993) between "critical' ethnography and "conventional' ethnography situates my research in the former ethnographic framework. According to Creswell (1998), conventional ethnographers emphasize "a political purpose to challenge research, policy, and other forms of human activity" . . . [whereas critical ethnographers] "speak "on behalf' of their subjects as a means of empowering them, giving them "voice' " (p. 211). Briefly, there are three cultural fronts in my study: 1) the culture of adult literacy within education; 2) the multi-ethnic and diverse backgrounds of the research participants that have an impact on their values, beliefs/interpretations, and resistances; and 3) the culture of aboriginal Canadians depicted in the stories, and the interconnectedness of each one to all the rest in the construction of meaning. I think the elements of culture, empowerment, and voice create an interweaving of the participants' voices and mine that gives reason to pay attention to the shifting landscape we call education and the inevitable erosions 57 that accompany change, whether individual, institutional, national, or international. Further, critical ethnography for this particular research study is informed by First Nations researchers. With reference to Haig-Brown and Archibald (1996), critical ethnography in a First Nations context "provides opportunity for study participants to engage in dialectical interactions of action and reflection -praxis-in relation to both the research and their situations . . . [and] resists hierarchical power relations" (p. 246) between the researcher and the study participants. These researchers write: Hammersley (1992) points out that critical ethnography is concerned with the overt expression of values (p. 103). In our work, such considerations were central. Respect concerned with values (such as reciprocity and harmony) and ethics (such as responsibility, representation, and authenticity); power, ultimately an issue of equity and ethics, focuses on relations, (p. 248) Bringing strands of theory and practice together—phenomenology, ethnography, emancipatory pedagogy-has been a deliberate attempt to harmonize and validate diverse voices representing both native and non-native cultures. The echoes of lived experience reverberate through the self-reflective oral and written narratives of the participants. Richardson (1995) writes: Narrative gives room for the expression of our individual and shared fates, our personal and communal worlds. Narrative permits the individual, the society, or the group to explain its experiences of temporality because narrative attends to and grows out of temporality. It is the best way to understand the human experience because it is the way humans understand their own lives, (p. 218) 58 Like van Manen (1992), Richardson recognizes that lived experience is not peripheral to learning; it is fundamental. Through "a union between poetics and science" (Richardson, p. 218), the narrative encourages voices to speak/write their own stories. Through poems and dreams, I attempt to make sense of experiences and identities that can empower or disempower voices in education. * * * * * * * * Lecture at Night School topic: death goals and objectives: destruction strategies: bullying i heard my words, poetry and prose, paragraphs of peace spliced into a hyper erratic text. no quotes cited, of course, no limits more petty thief than plagiarist, carving up cutting edge stuff, one poem i'd invented out of boredom. imagine seeing my words spitting out the black hole of a mouth so full of self, so empty of other at the centre of the room, like a normal being choosing me, alone, to taunt at the centre of the marginal crescent moon of desks grouped by human occupation i ached for wasted trees silenced that night no, that's not true, i ached forme my body rounding a full shell, neckpulledinturtletumingin animal-caught eyes 59 under a spell of ice blue gaze the patter of rehearsed articulation anchoring this concrete and steel tower rocking heel to toe, rocking cool and calm while the earth quaked.'. i left night school feeling bitten by smart darts aimed without care, scared, seeing another's m i n d about to se pa rate from b o d spirit less f ******** "Lecture at Night School" is a slice of life as a student that helps me, and I hope the reader, to re-imagine the oppressions experienced when power over students operates in classrooms to disempower the learner and toxify the learning environment for the targeted student(s). Though I believe that healthy partnerships between teacher and learner create a climate for building community and belonging, I recognize that toxic experiences sensitize us to the moral forces that serve to guide our principles and practices in pedagogical relationships, and the long-term negative effects that occur when these moral forces are not adhered to. Reflective Methods in Research and Practice In research and practice, I position myself as a facilitator and partner in the learning process, actively involved in multi-dimensional change—intellectual, physical, emotional, and spiritual—that opens possibilities not only for individual change but also social transformation. Among the research participants 60 ideological variables of gender, race, and class influence individual and cultural differences, yet I adhere to a personal philosophy that difference does not signify inequality. My role, therefore, as a researcher in adult literacy reflects a fundamental belief in equality and the right of every learner to be treated with dignity, respect and fairness. This position as a reflective practitioner contrasts with teacher-centred instruction described by Quigley (1997) in which the location of an authority figure clearly defines a hierarchical relationship between teacher and student. He provides an illustration of a woman's experience with a younger teacher who shows a "motherly attitude" that incites feelings in the adult student of "regressing to being a schoolgirl again" (p. 106). By this example, Quigley writes: Although all in the room were adults, the fact is that the teacher had succeeded in school and the learners had not. The two radically different sets of experiences, together with a host of social, cultural, and learning issues, create two perceptions of reality connected by the unspoken awareness that teachers have an "authoritative" role and students have a passive, ignorant role. (p. 107) Quigley asks "Why?" in referring to "traditional literacy programs" (p. 107) as though unequal relationships are scripted roles that must be followed. The woman gives school a try but drops out. If the majority of teachers were treated like ignorant children, I suspect they would not last long in a class, either, yet I have witnessed this condescending attitude too often in adult literacy. I think each individual has needs that change over time, and everyone grows and strengthens in a friendly and supportive environment; however, an 61 image of tragic victim arid the disempowering messages, such as "little lost sheep" (p. 108) that maintain a state of helplessness, when contrasted with an image of a resilient survivor and empowering messages that position him/her on a threshold of change, reveals how images and voices have the power to create de-formation versus re-formation. On an intellectual level, the research participants and I negotiated different points of view and drew our own conclusions about what the stories meant. The participants read the edited television stories from North of 60, participated in brainstorming to increase vocabulary, developed reflective thinking skills, and engaged in group discussion to problem solve real situations. Freire (1974,1997) advocates "dialogue about issues of everyday life that leads to praxis: reflection plus action that move students [and researcher] toward personal transformation" (Soleil, 2000, p. 78). To advance reflective inquiry for analyzing situations of everyday life, challenging assumptions, and exploring possible solutions, I suggest respectful discussion that invites a variety of perspectives. Social interaction based on a cognitive apprenticeship model articulated by Brown, Collins, and Duguid (1989) is an active, collaborative learning process to encourage ideas that are "exchanged and modified and belief systems developed and appropriated through conversation and narratives" (p. 40). Speakers and listeners go back and forth, sifting through a plethora of opinions until the learner finds clarity in the construction of meaning. This process of 62 using language as tools to accept some ideas while discarding others constitutes both individual and collective learning within a social context. A reflective methodology encompasses more than critical thinking that focusses on intellectual activity. While reading de Kerckhove (1995), I reassessed the reflective process on a physical level, particularly in connection to "reading" television stories, de Kerckhove writes about a test designed by Steven Kline and his brother, "to analyze people's physiological responses to anything they are being shown" (p. 7). de Kerckhove volunteered to be tested for his response as a "knee-jerk critic''to rapidly changing visual stimuli. I drew two important conclusions from that experience. The first is that television talks primarily to the body, not to the mind. This is something I'd suspected for several years. The second conclusion was that, if the video screen has such a direct impact on my nervous system and my emotions, and so little effect on my mind, then most of the information-processing was actually being performed by the screen, (p. 8) Although the writer acknowledges his conclusions are hypothetical, he refers to the " 'sub-muscularization effect' [that is] the interpretation of motion and action by a sort of sensorimotor mimicry involving the whole body" (p. 11). Citing Slopek (n.d.), a communications researcher at McGill University who has coined the expression "collapsing the interval' to explain how television eliminates the stimulus/ response interval so that there is little or no time "to reflect on what we are watching" (p. 10) on television, de Kerckhove speculates that human response to visual texts involves the body and emotions as well as the mind. 63 In addition, Fleckenstein (1996) claims that images are tied "closely to inner feeling and bodily reactions" (p. 920). She writes, "images are not direct copies of experience, but have been "projected' into new dimensions by the process of experiencing the stimuli and experiencing the image (Langer, Philosophy 127)" (p. 921). In Chapters 5, 6, and 7 of the dissertation, oral and written responses of the research participants illustrate the significant involvement of mind, body, and emotions in their interpretation of behaviours and situations revealed through image and voice in the television stories. Personally and culturally, students transfer information into knowledge in different ways. From a Native epistemological perspective, spirituality is embedded in their nature and acquisition of knowledge. Hanohano (1999) writes: Thus epistemology is the study of the nature and attainment of knowledge, and which much of the literature describes as holistic, encompassing the intellectual, emotional, physical and spiritual realms. (Barman, Hebert, & McCaskill, 1987). Calls for reforming our educational systems to better meet the needs of Native students always include Native culture and language. And the most distinguishing feature of Native culture and language is its spirituality. However, this is the one aspect of Native culture that is often missing, neglected, or dismissed in western educational models, (p. 211) Despite Hanohano's contention that spirituality is often absent in education, I would argue that creativity is an expression of the human spirit made manifest. Since my reflective practice includes a spiritual dimension, it is important for the reader's awareness in order to walk with me in the same learning landscape. 64 Western dualism situates self and other in a hierarchy of domination and subordination, superiority and inferiority. In terms of status, situating people with greater power at the centre and people with less power in the margin is a socially constructed concept that is contrary to traditional aboriginal notions of equality and balance in a circle within cycles of being. Although I cannot claim to be aboriginal in terms of education and lived experience, I feel more attuned to traditional aboriginal beliefs, values, and sensibility embedded in non-gendered language that does not differentiate the male as superior to the female. Learning in both native and non-native contexts requires participation, listening, and reflection as different voices make meaning from differing worldviews. Research as a reflective process situates the researcher as a learner both in the classroom and in the world. Smith (1976) quoted in Modra (1989) writes: There is no "expert' who knows the answers and whose job it is to transmit those answers. Individuals come together with equally valid, but different, perspectives, sharing problems which have yet to be defined, seeking answers which have yet to be formulated, (p. 127) Adult literacy learners have met a lot of experts in education who have exposed real limitations of expertise in terms of their ability to help students with various disabilities. Modra's opinion invites reflection. To be humble in sharing knowledge with others requires an admission of ignorance, too, because we are all evolving throughout our lives. Students want to feel confident that the teacher has special expertise, yet experts who abuse their power in a classroom 65 may cause irreparable harm. In the teaching of information in a specific subject, the teacher acts as an assistant who helps students construct meaning. As learners, we enter texts with past knowledge already formed by our culture, values, and beliefs. Gender, race, and class sensitivities influence our ways of knowing and seeing reality, van Manen (1990) explains: The phenomenological method consists of the ability, or rather the art of being sensitive—sensitive to the subtle undertones of language, to the way language speaks when it allows the things themselves to speak. This means that an authentic speaker must be a true listener, able to attune to the deep tonalities of language that normally fall out of our accustomed range of hearing, able to listen to the way things of the world speak to us. (p. I l l ) Taking a phenomenological approach by studying reality in socially relevant television stories has been my process for conducting research in adult literacy and developing a reflective learning methodology. In my opening poem (p. 49), inspired by Native spiritual teachings and the Medicine Wheel, I began in the East where beginnings emerge in harmony with natural phenomena. When eagles lock talons and tumble through space, they create a bond of trust. A fearsome responsibility moves them to act on intuitive knowing and physical being in harmony with creation. The practicalities of working together to locate a secure home site in which to raise their young require skills and strategies, planning and practice, patience and trust. Theirs is a sacred path, one requiring commitment and effort. In order to fulfill their purpose as partners, eagles must embrace, in human terms, relationship, trust, responsibility, and commitment. The eagle messenger reminds humans that learning these qualities is a team effort, not only to expand our horizons through knowledge and action in the external world but also to illuminate our internal world through creativity, reflection, and transformation. 67 CHAPTER 4: STORY SUMMARIES Workshop One: "Competition" The story for the first workshop focussed on a theme of job competition that results in betrayal of trust between two male characters. The betrayal encompasses both personal and cultural experiences. In this edited segment, the non-native Band Manager, Harris, and his native stepson, TeeVee, both appear to be working cooperatively toward job training for TeeVee. The opening scene shows Harris gladly heaping files of job postings on TeeVee for his perusal, and from this batch of opportunities, TeeVee decides to apply for a Band Manager Trainee position. With his stepfather's recommendation plus references from Chief Peter, and R.C.M.P. Constable, Michelle, TeeVee naturally feels hopeful that his application will be successful. In the beginning, a mood of celebration and goodwill carries over from the recent marriage between Harris and TeeVee's mother, Lois. Whatever conflicts have existed prior to the wedding, all appear to be forgiven because seeing his mother's happiness has caused TeeVee to let down his guard and trust Harris. In a prior episode, TeeVee even jokes about Harris being "the white guy that always says no" but now, when TeeVee wants his support, Harris seems to be enjoying his new responsibility as a mentor and advocate. Delays in processing the application begin to bother TeeVee; he feels impatient to assume responsibilities of his own by helping to support his girlfriend, Bertha, and their baby daughter. Time lags, and TeeVee asks Harris 68 and the Chief for phone numbers to make follow-up inquiries. He receives mixed messages from Harris and becomes suspicious when his calls are not connecting with the appropriate people. The Chief says, "Good old Harris" in a tone that foreshadows the outcome. Then, he instructs TeeVee to try a different number and tell them he's calling to pay off a loan just so he can speak directly to someone rather than voice mail. Following his instincts, and disguising his identity in a phone call to a government agent involved in the hiring process, TeeVee learns that Harris has betrayed him by directing the authorities to withdraw his recommendation; hence, the application that could have created solidarity and respect in the family becomes the catalyst for dissension. The local shopkeeper who has overheard the telephone conversation alerts Harris to the fact that TeeVee "is onto him". A profoundly moving scene occurs when Harris is working late, and Lois sends TeeVee with a bowl of soup for his stepfather. Her loyalty and blind trust contrasts her husband's disloyalty and deceitfulness. In his office, the camera catches Harris trying to bully the agent into reversing the decision to reject TeeVee's application, but he does not succeed. Framed on the far side of a window, behind Venetian blinds, and under direct light, Harris appears imprisoned in physical space and conscience. A double entendre created by the external bar-like image of the blinds and the stepfather's internal blindness has a powerful visual impact when the participants begin to discuss the symbolism in this scene. By unethical and devious means, Harris cannot escape his actions, and his agitation contrasts with 69 TeeVee's forced restraint. As TeeVee comes slowly toward his office, the camera casts half his face in light, half in shadow, thus, creating a mirror image of love and hate that both men, in that moment, face. It is the fate of human reason that our capacity for good and evil operates on the choices we make and the inevitable consequences of those choices. Even when Harris follows the Chiefs advice to borrow money and set up a job sharing position to salvage the wrong he has committed, TeeVee refuses any compromises. Furiously, he,challenges Harris to tell him why he sabotaged his chances, and Harris replies that because he is white, he fears TeeVee will take his job once he is trained as a Band Manager. Of course, his stepson expresses shock that he would jeopardize family relations in such an underhanded way. The final scene shows Bertha comforting the father of her child, knowing his rage and realizing there is nothing he will do to change the situation. When she suggests that he go to the Chief with the truth in order to punish Harris and make him responsible for his actions, TeeVee says that would be impossible. "It would kill my mother. I mean really kill her." What became clear in responses to the story was a cultural interpretation based on individualist and collectivist positions. I noted that participants who were either native or from cultures where social conditioning encourages a strong sense of family honour or decision-making by group consensus or considering responsibility for the good of all rather than individual rights understood and generally agreed with TeeVee's decision to maintain silence, 70 whereas participants who were socially conditioned to put individual rights first felt that TeeVee should have spoken out despite the pain it would cause his family and the community. The participants could all relate to competition versus collaboration and agree on the principles of fairness, honesty, and respect, but how to respond when these principles are broken remained open for debate and reflection. Workshop Two: "Corrections" The second episode shown during the pilot project portrays a violent confrontation between a native female police officer and a native male teenager. The story exposes gender, race, and class stereotypes as well as issues of police authority over prisoners. Like the other stories selected for the study, this one provides an opening "for educating students to be critical rather than merely good citizens" (Giroux, Simon et al., 1989, p. ix), and to expand their understanding of how knowledge and power "both enable and silence the voices of different [people]" (p. be). The text reveals the fragility of social order when the intention of police to provide protection for a society degenerates into violence and chaos. Although William uses verbal abuse, taunts, and sexual innuendoes to inflame Michelle, she puts herself at risk of legal action and loss of her job. The community, though witnesses to her actions, indicate their unconditional support and want her to remove William from the community immediately. However, planes to his home in Yellowkriife cannot fly in for two days, and in 71 the meantime, Michelle has to mediate the rising opinions of her brother, the community members, and her prisoner. On a personal level, the police officer, Michelle, reflects on the irony of a native authority figure striking an unarmed native youth with a billy club in a jail cell. She confesses that first she lost her reason; next, she lost her instincts; then, she wondered what she was doing in a cell beating a prisoner unconscious. When Michelle is able to feel William's suffering, she understands her own pain and discovers that "the heart often provides surer insight than reason; heartless knowledge is dead knowledge" (van Manen, 1990, p. 139). A significant detail in the story that is glossed over but worth contesting in a classroom setting is demystification of child abuse in professional, middle class homes. Although absent in the production, Michelle learns through his local detachment that William's mother is a nurse and his father a teacher. The parents never appear in the story nor are they notified that their son has been incarcerated, so some participants objected strenuously to the ad hoc decisions made by the officer while William was being held in police custody. William's legal rights seemed to be the most contentious issue, while acts of self-mutilation and a threat to kill himself while in jail appeared to be of less concern—behaviours often manifested by individuals who have experienced some form of abuse, then, turn the pain inward as self-loathing and despair. Michelle's accusation of him going bad "because that's what Indians are supposed to do" silences William and denies him any compassion based on the 72 officer's assumption that educated parents provide their children with a privileged home environment which, therefore, inoculates them from abusive acts either at home or in the community. Since education is only one factor for improving the emotional and economic well-being of children in a family, the officer's assumption that William comes from a "good home" may be flawed. William's self-destructive actions provide visible clues that he experienced some form of abuse in his life. In my view, running away from home and getting in trouble with the law signal deep, inner unhappiness although the causes remain undisclosed to the readers. Despite the sensitive nature of identifying signs of child abuse and discussing ways that victims may be silenced by fear or shame, a fictional story creates an opening to discuss the tragic consequences of abuse when society imposes a code of silence. In the final scene of the edited segment, William is released from jail and walks alone into a community that does not want him, leaving him vulnerable to becoming a repeat offender. This victim/offender cycle opens another layer for discussion about social responsibility and community support services available to individuals who need such support in order to grow into healthy citizens. Workshop Three: "The Outsider" The story for the third session deals with insider/outsider issues when a young native man, Nevada, arrives as an unknown to the close-knit community. Universal themes of light and dark, good/evil, love/hate, acceptance/rejection, 73 hope/fear, truth/lie create the plot's dynamics between human belonging and isolation. The first scene opens at the home of Elsie, an Elder whose knowledge of traditional plant medicines contrast the differences between Native and Western medicine. As Elsie prescribes pond scum to clean the outsider's wound, Sarah, a non-native nurse in the community gently provides her alternative interpretation that pond scum is dirty. While Sarah administers the natural medicine under the guidance of Elsie, a teachable moment occurs for the readers who observe the different cultural practices in health remedies. Who holds the knowledge, who administers the remedy, and whose authority gains respect as a healer is clearly depicted as a shared power relation that contests an assumption that Western medicine is superior to Native medicine. In a classroom of second language learners, the diversity of health care practices, alone, could be easily expanded as a separate topic for small group discussion. Another contrast presented in the opening scene is the kindness of the two women toward Nevada, whereas later in the story, antagonism and rejection are shown by other people in the community as he begins to fabricate a life story that soon falls apart at the seams. His wound not only foreshadows a serious health condition, but also forms a symbolic pattern of Woundedness beginning in Nevada's childhood and continuing through adulthood. His declared reason for coming to Lynx River as a graduate student and doing research in preparation to write a thesis is a sham. His repeated deceptions limit authentic contact to a few people who give unconditional acceptance. 74 Kenyon & Randall (1997) suggest that "The way we tell and show ourselves to others generates a picture of what we are like—our abilities and limits. Based on this picture, their treatment of us either opens up certain opportunities or closes them off" (p. 37). While the majority in the community had doubts about Nevada's motivation for being there/the story shows reflective and unreflective personalities. This story turns an insightful lens on human nature, and the oppositions that arise when exclusionary biases dominate an individual's perspective. In another scene, while sitting around a campfire with men and boys from the community, Nevada shares a story about a sea lion hunt with his father. The intent to build camaraderie fails when details raise suspicion. One strand of the story proves to be true, but several details are embroidered lies. A child in the group challenges Nevada's version of the adventure based on the fact that harpoons are no longer used, thus, bringing humiliation to the telling of a memory fragment. Later, when the true version of his story is revealed as a tragic turning point in his life, Nevada gains understanding from, Joey, another outsider whose mother is dead; his father in rehab. What provides Joey with greater security than Nevada is an extended family in Lynx River; Nevada, on the other hand, has been living on the streets, mostly in Vancouver as a male prostitute, since running away from a violent home at age 14. 75 Following the campfire episode, Nevada awakens in panic. "Why did everyone seem so pissed off at me last night?" he asks an Elder whose response comes from a caring heart and thoughtful knowing rather than a lecture. "My wife always said I talk too much. "Talk less and listen more/ she said. "Then when you have something to say, people will listen'." Insight reflects wisdom. On a hunting expedition with Joey and TeeVee, tension builds between Nevada and TeeVee, who is also on the run from a conflict with a local youth. "Trust me Snowman," Nevada says. "You start running, it's hard to stop." TeeVee is in no mood for counsel, and the two men goad each other for the duration of the hunt. As the conflict reaches a climax, Nevada reveals the truth about his life to Joey, who responds with a compassionate mind as Nevada adds, "I'm still alive, man. That's all it's been about since I was 14." No action has earned this trust except the recognition that suffering souls simply accept each other's experience without judgement. Soon after breaking camp, the young men find moose tracks in the snow and the three take separate trails to maximize their chances; a moose appears at close range, and Nevada, an inexperienced hunter, has a clear shot but misses; as the moose runs free, Nevada collapses in the snow, breathless, and too weak to continue the hunt. For the pilot project, the research participants saw the final scene where Nevada admits to Sarah he is HIV positive. However, at the other sites, I stopped the segment with Nevada collapsing in the forest. This change was made for two reasons. First, while discussing the stories with a senior 76 administrator at a potential site, he expressed concern that one brief incident near the end of the segment might trigger some of the students, a risk I was not prepared to take. Second, the theme I wanted the participants to address was insider/outsider relationships, and what conditions create a hospitable environment for outsiders coming in to a new situation. Hence, the other three sites did not see the complete edited story, although seeing Nevada collapse provided a clue for them to predict the reason and implications for his future at Lynx River. Of the four stories, the "Outsider" was least discussed as a memorable story during the wrap-up interviews. I thought, perhaps, the second language learners might identify with some aspects of being an outsider. Surprisingly, the native speakers of English had more to say on this topic, since a few participants elaborated in their reflective written responses about being teased, taunted, and marginalized by their literate peers in their earlier school experience. Workshop Four: "Safe Home" For the last workshop, the screenwriters provided a title, "Safe Home" to explore a child's vulnerability in an unstable, adult world. The story features a little boy, Charlie Muskrat, taken from his home by Social Services because his mother is in a drug rehabilitation program. Choice of language as well as facial and body images in the opening scene create power dynamics between adults whose control over a child creates unstable conditions, thereby, arousing fear, 77 anger, and alienation in the child. An interim caregiver, Betty Moses, explains to Michelle that "Social Services dumped him with a cousin" when his mother could no longer care for him. According to Betty, the situation at the cousin's is "a real mess", so Charlie is "on the road" travelling with Betty in her role as supervisor of drug and alcohol treatment centres. The instability in Charlie's life is compounded when Betty assumes he can stay with her good friend, Michelle, in Lynx River for a short time. Without forewarning, Michelle arrives home to find a child in her living room watching television and, initially, thinks the child is an apparition of her deceased daughter, Hanna. Unhealed grief becomes the central barrier to communication that results in Charlie feeling abandoned again while he waits for his; mother to be released from treatment. Vivid images of human connection and disconnection in the rising action show the heart-wrenching dilemmas that happen when people, irrespective of age difference, cannot comfort each other as long as their experiences of loss and i grief are on parallel paths, simultaneously. The clash of human emotions that surface between Michelle and Charlie reveal the sensitivity needed to assist individuals in coming to terms with loss of someone they love. Their strong, stoical feelings, so close to the surface, prevent what they need most, to find comfort in each other. Rising action in the story reveals how basic needs of a child are not being met by the adults around him whose own sets of complex circumstances 78 override his need for shelter, food, and care. Adults hold power; adults exert their power over children, often without consultation or respectful consideration that a child has feelings, too. In fact, Charlie shows remarkable resilience, empathy, and self-reliance as often happens when a child faces his/her own survival at an early age. He also wears the scars of wounding and distrust and accurately reads and interprets verbal and non-verbal messages given to him by adults. When Michelle rejects Charlie's need for acceptance or comfort, there is an immediacy to his responses. For example, their first encounter indicates to Charlie that he is unwelcome, disliked, and alone. He runs outside/and when Betty catches him, he says, quite understandably, "I don't like her." Here, he reacts without really understanding his feelings and needs being generated as anger rather than fear and sadness. Betty discounts his inner knowing. "You don't like anybody," she responds, without empathy. Over time, a child learns to distrust his intuitive responses, leaving him less able to respond authentically later on as an adult with compassion for self and others. Rather, the internalized messages of rejection turn into self-blame or blaming the other in a negative cycle. In the recesses of a child's memory, the loss of truth scars her reason, now, an adult encased in a specially-baked cake and white lies. How the body clings to unwanted food, swelling with each distasteful bite of seeming politeness, telling me that granny believed this specially baked cake was the little one's favorite treat, baked with care over and over in a desire to please the beloved child. 79 "Ihated that cake, " the adult says, passing a piece for me to ingest her dislike of it, of me. "And I could never tell my grandmother the truth,"she says, as i taste toxicity, swallow the bittersweet memory. She hates kindness still, the daffodils i bring, signs of hope that shrivel. In metaphor, her laughter caws and caws carelessly. Another reason for Charlie's mistrust of adults is revealed during a card game. Andrew, a friend of Michelle's, comes to visit. Charlie quickly seizes the moment to take charge by disallowing Andrew from joining the game. Michelle tries to reassure Charlie that "[Andrew's] a nice guy, y' know" but from lived experience, Charlie's internal voice says aloud, "Till he starts beating up on y' ". Without making eye contact, Michelle responds, "Andrew doesn't do that" and the moment of tension passes. It will take many messages, both overtly and covertly through positive relationships between men and women, to convince Charlie and children like him that some adults can be trusted while others cannot. "Safe Home" exposes a child's vulnerability when designated guardians fail to provide responsible care. In Charlie's case, the "dumping pattern" results in a crisis when his anticipated return home is postponed due to his mother's condition. This delay conflicts with Betty's planned trip to the United States, and as his temporary caregiver, she cannot legally take him across the border. One option would be to change her travel plans, but Betty has her own agenda and tends to be an inflexible, opinionated personality, anyway. After a struggle, Michelle agrees to let Charlie stay with her until Betty returns. Though less than 80 ideal, Charlie makes a supreme effort to please Michelle without his desired results. Charlie has a nightmare and crawls into bed with Michelle, triggering memories in Michelle of her daughter. In a dazed fog, she forcefully orders him back to a strange bedroom. To make amends for upsetting her in the night, Charlie prepares breakfast like he used to for his mother. He tries so hard to be accepted. Later at Hanna's gravesite, Michelle seeks a few solitary minutes but is followed by Charlie who offers tobacco and says, "For Hanna." Michelle abruptly shoves his hand away, and he runs from the cemetery. I briefly explained the scene to Lee Brown, a native educator and author, for his interpretation of the incident. He explained to me that "tobacco is a request for communication" . . . [but Michelle] "is rejecting the boy's tobacco because [she perceives it to be] an improper gesture" (email message, Sunday, January 20, 2002 8:09 PM). There can be different reasons for offering tobacco, but Charlie's need for communication makes the most sense, and though his intentions were kind and thoughtful, Charlie, no doubt, felt that not only his gesture was being rejected, but also himself. During the workshops, the general feeling of the native participants was that Charlie probably wanted to show his respect and sympathy for Michelle. Again, this scene involving proper protocol when offering tobacco involves cultural layers of meaning, the significance of which would not be understood by the majority of non-native readers. That Michelle responded in an impatient and disrespectful manner is a reminder that anyone, 81 child or adult, learning the sacred ways of a different culture needs to ask what the proper protocols are for a particular situation. Even then, "the answer you seek may not be the one you want to hear" (Alannah Young at a Traditional Teachings seminar, First Nations House of Learning, University of British Columbia, January 16,2002). We are sometimes too impatient to listen and blunder into ignorance, offending people we most wish to respect, and these cultural misunderstandings can become critical judgements that divide rather than unite if reflection on the intent of the outsider is not taken into consideration by the insider. In that poignant moment at the cemetery, where roles are reversed, the readers see how the hurt child re-appears within a suffering adult and reacts in anger while the wisdom of a little boy, still too young to fully comprehend the situation, reaches out with open warmth and receives a chilling rebuke. When Charlie doesn't come home that night and is found sitting at the airstrip in freezing temperatures, Michelle reflects aloud to Sarah. "He's just a little kid; he's scared; he just wanted me to be nice to him. Why can't I be nice to him? Am I going to be like this forever?" For me, the questions move out from the speaker like rippling currents, pushing tlie edges of possibility across borders, across cultural boundaries, across the hurts that separate us as people, one from the other. Voices of the ancestors inhabit our memories, have gone before us to other ways of knowing. Why can't we learn other ways of being now or are we going to be like this, in conflict, forever? 82 CHAPTER 5: SITE ONE Introduction The pilot project took place at a university college campus during the Spring Semester. An outline of questions (Appendix D.l) to assist participants in their reflective processing was provided as an informal guide, and the researcher offered open-ended questions to stimulate discussions. A writing sample was not requested of the Site One participants nor did they receive brainstorming worksheets. Unlike the main research project (Chapters 6 and 7) that introduced brainstorming techniques for vocabulary building, the skill development in the pilot project emphasized group discussion and problem-solving as the basis from which to write reflective journal responses. As with the other sites, this group of research participants wrote their responses to three stories after the workshops ended, but for the fourth story, they were asked to write during the last half hour of the workshop. The reason for the format change in the last workshop was twofold: first, I wanted to assess the writing skills and reflective thinking when students had unlimited time to consider their response compared with a limited time of half an hour that required an immediate response; and second, I needed P ' • to read the responses to the last story before interviewing the participants the following week, so I chose the most expeditious way to compact the participants' time commitment to the project. Pedagogically, the research procedures for the pilot project were designed as a situated learning model (Brown et al, 1989, Collins, et al, 1991, Lave & 83 Wenger, 1991, Wilson, 1993), because I wanted to facilitate the workshops in a manner that would allow the research participants to not only interact with the texts, but also communicate with each other as a means of acquiring language— both oral and written. "In the situated view, experience becomes activity and takes on a much more dynamic relation to learning" (Wilson, 1993, p. 75). Of significance, I believe, is the recursive processing of language and the reciprocal exchange of ideas that enrich personal learning when adults analyze stories as a group rather than as individuals who read and respond to stories independently. Lave and Wenger (1991) studied forms of apprenticeship in the process of developing a theory of situated learning. Of relevance to my research study that links language learning with social interaction, Lave and Wenger explore ways that "learning involves the whole person . . . becoming a full participant, a member . . . able to be involved in new activities, to perform new tasks and functions, to master new understandings" (p. 53) within a community rather than in isolation. Each adult literacy student engages in language learning activities that ultimately change his/her self-concept and involve the construction of identity, (p. 53) In my teaching experience with adult literacy students in an adult learning centre as well as my observations in a variety of educational settings, including libraries and storefront classrooms in Ontario and college upgrading programs in British Columbia, it has been my impression that many adult literacy programs provide limited opportunities to participate in social interactions. 84 As adult members in an academic community, I believe literacy learners are entitled to a program that includes both independent and interdependent activities. Becoming print literate is more than a cerebral process. According to Lave and Wenger, situated learning requires participation in situated activity. Participation is always based on situated negotiation and renegotiation of meaning in the world. This implies that understanding and experience are in constant interaction— indeed, are mutually constitutive. The notion of participation thus dissolves dichotomies between cerebral and embodied activity, between contemplation and involvement, between abstraction and experience: persons, actions, and the world are implicated in all thought, speech, knowing, and learning, (p. 52). Rather than dissolving dichotomies identified above, I prefer the notion that participation integrates the stated dichotomies. I selected television texts from the Canadian series North of 60 because the stories depicted current social issues of every day life, yet located the situations in a specific cultural context outside an urban centre: a northern aboriginal community known as Lynx River. Although the research participants could have responded to the stories without group discussion, I view oral language and dialogue as necessary to the formation of meaning and understanding. Discussion on social issues represented in the stories, such as sexism, racism, classism, human rights, health education, employment, child care, nutrition, housing, equality, and justice generates a flow of ideas and hopefully expands an individual's confidence to transfer oral language into print form. 85 Although my research methodology for the project did not conform to an ethnographic study, there were aspects of ethnography both from the research participants' activities and mine, in the sense that information gathering, analysis, reflection, and reporting as observers on situations within a particular cultural context unrelated to their own was being undertaken. Creswell (1998) writes, "The ethnographer's task is the recording of human behavior in cultural terms" (p. 324), although the research participants were neither interviewing nor collecting data to be categorized in a formal, scientific manner. For the research participants in the pilot project, none of whom were aboriginal, their task was to study television stories portrayed as representations of reality in an aboriginal community, report on their findings, and reflect on their learning from the stories, whereas my task was to study a culture of adult literacy learners using television stories as a tool for developing literacy skills, and interviewing them to gain insight into their learning with some consideration of their responses through different cultural lenses. Within a narrow interpretation of ethnography, the participants were observing and reporting on "(a) a description of the context, (b) an analysis of the major themes, and (c) the interpretation of cultural behavior (Wolcott, 1994b)" in (Creswell, 1998, p. 104). To connect reflective thinking and writing directly to the situated experiences of the readers (and writers) in relation to the characters in the stories, there were four questions to guide the discussions: (1) What is the (conflict) situation in the story? (2) Who/what is responsible for this situation? (3) Why 86 are things this way? and (4) What needs to happen to improve the situation? Within this framework for analysis of theme, plot, characters, and setting, the participants observed a ""culture at work' (H.F. Wolcott, personal communication, October 10,1996)" (Creswell, p. 245) and grappled with their emotional responses, cultural biases, values, and beliefs that create tensions between real life and visual representations of real life situations. Overview of Site One Participants Participants at Site One represented a multicultural, heterogeneous group. The three men and eight women came from economically diverse backgrounds and spanned over 40 years in range of age. As a literacy volunteer in the classroom the previous semester, I had tutored one of the participants an hour per week and led a small group of second language learners in a reading circle one afternoon per week for approximately ten weeks, so some of the participants had met me prior to the project. Of the 11 active participants, only one Canadian English speaker attended all four workshops and submitted four reflective journals, whereas three out of five second language learners attended every workshop and submitted four journals. One second language learner attended three workshops and submitted two journals while another attended three workshops and submitted three journals. Two Canadian English speakers attended two workshops but submitted no writing. Finally, a student who spoke Creole and had extremely limited literacy skills wrote a simple sentence in response to the second story and 87 submitted a two-page journal in response to the final workshop with the assistance of two scribes. The second language learners had limited background knowledge of Canadian television or Native culture. Only one Canadian English speaker said he had lived near a native reserve and described people he met as "wealthy" native people. He expressed interest in the portrayal of a Native community that differed from his earlier exposure. In a U.S. literacy study, Merrifield, Bingman, Hemphill, and deMarrais (1997) found that a common theme among the immigrants they profiled "rely on television for an inordinate amount of information about the dominant culture of the United States, almost as a surrogate for interactions with native speakers of English. Most desire such interactions with actual humans but must settle for them in a passive, electronic incarnation" (p. 179). However, the participants in my pilot project did not fit the above profile in terms of dependency on television. Although most of the participants in my research study indicated in the survey that they watched some television as a means of information gathering or entertainment, the group of second language learners said during a break in the first workshop that they only spent a modest amount of time watching television at home because they were too busy with family responsibilities and other interests. Four participants at Site One could meet their daily needs by using their first language either through family or community contacts. Therefore, it 88 seemed that the second language learners eagerly took advantage of any chance to converse in English while in the classroom, but in their private lives, they spoke mostly in their first language. During regular class time, students worked independently, most of the time, and did not necessarily know the names of classmates nor did they share ideas in group activities to develop skills in reading comprehension. Limited social interaction took place since the primary course materials were taped recordings that students listened to individually. In my experience, adult literacy instructors usually work in relative isolation as no consistent, mandated adult literacy curriculum exists at either a provincial or community level, and even within a college system, program materials may differ from one campus to another, depending on the literacy levels and needs of the students on site. As a reflective practitioner in adult literacy, one priority of mine has always been to encourage a sense of community by incorporating activities in which students with diverse literacy skills can participate equally on a regular basis. Television as an educational resource stimulates language acquisition through active listening and discussion. Merrifield et al. (1997) points out that "one of the most basic distinctions that needs to be drawn between the literacy needs of native speakers and non-native speakers of English [ESL] has to do with the added burden of developing oral/ aural proficiency as well as cultural understanding" (p. 8). To support this position, the second language learners at Site One, as well as the other sites, 89 responded eagerly to any opportunity to synchronize the four language domains: speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Not only is it important for the majority of literacy learners to practise oral/aural skill development as part of their mastery in academic discussion/ interpretation on a specific topic, but also as a way of expanding conversational turn-taking, colloquial expressions, debate, problem-sharing as well as non-verbal gestures that relate to cultural norms. For the regular class time, students worked independently, for the most part, and did not necessarily know the names of classmates nor did they share ideas in group activities to develop skills in reading comprehension. Limited social interaction took place in class since the primary course materials were audiotaped stories and exercises that students listened to individually at their own rate. With a few of the participants, the regular instructor had introduced reader response strategies, such as predicting, thinking aloud, and connecting new information to past knowledge that has been stored in memory. However, the class of multi-level learners required individualized programs and often worked in relative isolation. After the first workshop, I simplified plans of introducing a different small group activity for each session to facilitating one large group discussion because the participants' daily routine of working on independent assignments had not prepared them for this sudden shift to group analysis and discussion. 90 A significant feature of the research site was the enthusiasm of the instructor. She encouraged literacy enrichment opportunities for her students and expressed a positive attitude toward research in the classroom. While I was searching for suitable sites for the main research project, I became more aware of the supportive role that an instructor takes in ensuring a respectful relationship with everyone involved in the project. The instructor at Site One arranged optional assignments and alternative study areas for a few students who did not wish to participate in the research project. Planning options is an important aspect of classroom research since participation is voluntary and withdrawal at any time during the study is a condition of the letter of consent. Students must be prepared in advance for changes so that the individuals not involved in the research study still come to class and work productively on separate projects. In my view, the encouraging, cooperative attitude of the instructor at Site One set a positive tone for my first meeting with the students, thereby enhancing their receptivity to discuss the purpose and format of the research project and to commit time and effort to an unfamiliar learning situation. Physical Layout In retrospect, the layout of the classroom that had two large circular tables set on a diagonal in the centre of a long, narrow room and work stations around the perimeter, was not conducive to group interaction and created an imbalance in terms of physical proximity to the television. Participants formed two camps around the tables—the second language learners sitting close to the television 91 and all but one Canadian English speaker sitting at a distance, divided by the expanse of furniture and cultural difference. I wanted the sessions to be informal and non-threatening which meant that participants found their own comfort zone rather than conforming to a prescribed seating plan. Interestingly, the second language learners sitting closest to the television were more actively engaged than the Canadian English speakers who chose to sit farther away from the screen. While the six second language learners debated through coffee breaks and enthusiastically wrote reflective responses, the others missed at least one session, took breaks, and did not complete their journals. This is not to imply that coffee breaks cause a decrease in writing, but the proximity to the television seemed to maximize focussed reading and reflective response. As a researcher, I can only speculate that a different room and seating arrangement might have resulted in a more cohesive whole and encouraged everyone's active participation. Workshop Highlights In the first session, the participants received a brief overview of the main characters and setting. However, no background information, discussion of theme, or prediction of plot action was discussed. They were accustomed to either hearing or reading a story twice, depending on whether the story was an audiotaped version or a hard copy. The first "reading" of the visual text ran uninterrupted. General confusion followed when I asked them to discuss the text with a partner. The students normally read print texts in isolation, so they 92 balked at my request to work with someone. During the second reading, I stopped the video twice to elicit their responses to camera techniques, lighting, mood, and symbolism, but otherwise I refrained from entering the group discussion until it was time to wrap up the session. In discussion, oral opinions, and written responses, the participants at this site were divided along cultural lines. It should be noted that none of the participants at this site was a native student. Those who came from Asian countries and understood a collectivist stance as their cultural norm, expressed deep sympathy and approval for TeeVee's decision to remain silent about the incident; others who upheld an individualist stance from a Western perspective demanded that Harris be held accountable for his interference with due process. TeeVee felt that silence was his only choice because speaking out, he believed, would kill his mother, His position was less valued by the individualist voices at Site One who strongly condemned Harris's actions. One student with collectivist sympathies said that whether or not she cared about a person would influence her actions. It was a hotly contested decision among participants at all sites. Native participants who retained connection to native cultural traditions understood TeeVee's refusal to seek revenge or involve anyone from his community in the private conflict between Harris and himself. However, I recall Laura, a native woman from the family literacy group who had spent most of her childhood with non-native foster parents, objecting to TeeVee's reasoning that his mother 93 needed to be protected because this would insulate her from knowing the truth and, thereby, keep her in a state of false consciousness. During this first session, I attempted to remain neutral throughout the group discussion and asked open-ended questions. Students who were not accustomed to giving opinions on social or family issues showed preference for sticking to the facts but included reflective comments in their journal. Some looked to me to confirm a right or wrong answer rather than synthesizing information and drawing their own conclusions. Building a meaningful partnership within the group did not happen immediately, even though they had spent considerable time together in the same classroom, and the dynamics remained essentially divided between Canadian English speakers and second language speakers with one in the former group joining the latter group for the next three workshops. The students raised in English as their first language demonstrated less commitment to participate fully in the study by irregular attendance, little or no written responses, and physical distance from the active participants. I ended the first session by asking participants to consider what their response would be if they knew a relative had broken a law that threatened the security of other family members and/or the community. The question remained open for their reflection. The second episode shown during the pilot project portrayed a violent confrontation between a native female police officer and a native male teenager. 94 Before showing the video, I asked the group to discuss with a partner: (a) their assumptions surrounding the role of police in society, and (b) if they were involved in hiring new recruits, what character traits did they consider desirable for police work. Later, in the main research study, I used this strategy to begin each session by asking a question relating to the story's theme. Participants recorded their spontaneous ideas, briefly shared information with someone nearby, and referred to their notes later as a comparison with the representation of police in the actual plot. For this story, I provided background information from previous shows so that allusions to past events would be understood by the readers. Innuendoes made by William in reference to the recent death of Michelle's daughter, Hanna, complicated her ability to respond to his taunts. Without this information to explain her emotional fragility, the layers of meaning would not only escape the readers' notice, but also skew their analysis of the situation. Under normal circumstances, for example, the community might not be so ready to forgive her actions. Even so, there were participants who felt no mercy and judged Michelle on the basis of her actions. During the second and subsequent sessions, I paused the episode several times for questions and comments. One poignant moment during this workshop, that is explored more in depth in the final interview with Ellen (pseudonym), focussed on her close identification with William's situation. Coincidentally, she was celebrating a milestone of being drug-free on the same 95 day of the workshop. Because of Ellen's support network and progress in her healing process, bringing such a relevant story into her learning environment at that precise time enabled her to respond objectively and to take pride in her recovery; however/the serendipitous situation alerted me to discuss specific topics with the instructors at other sites in advance of the study, since identification with characters can stimulate powerful responses, both positively and negatively. In the letter of consent, participants were also informed that they could voluntarily withdraw from the study at any time. Fortunately/ Ellen's identity with William created inspiration later on when we discussed how her lived experiences were still impeding her learning. From this experience, I learned two lessons; a) course materials need to be sensitively selected since, in any given classroom, a percentage of students will have experienced some form of abuse in their lived experience, and b) support services should be available for students in case stories with traumatic events, relevant to the student's experience, are introduced in course materials and, unexpectedly come to the surface. During the second workshop, I observed a comfort level of knowing what to expect, thus creating greater focus. In this session, I stopped the video frequently to ask questions about visual effects and their symbolic meaning. Literary and visual devices were discussed to optimize the construction and retention of meaning and assist second language learners who have a tendency to lose the thread of a story if slang or slurred phrases create a tangle of words. 96 Sometimes when the characters were facing away from the camera, or words were poorly articulated, a second language learner might depend on body language, tone, and background visuals to interpret the rising action. Because the story contests a stereotype in showing a native female police officer instead of a white male police officer brutally attacking a male prisoner, I presumed, erroneously, that this representation of reality might be challenged; however, the female majority vociferously argued that women can be just as brutal as men. Yet, lack of accountability of a police officer and the absence of William's parents in the story generated moral outrage. The third workshop introduced issues of belonging. Though native and non-native approaches to medicine and healing could be the focus of discussion for this particular story, I chose to explore insider/outsider issues, in part, because adult literacy learners often experience alienation from the literate community. I thought Nevada's sense of alienation and struggle for acceptance had relevance in an adult literacy context. Like the scene in which Elsie prescribes pond scum to heal an open wound, the participants reflected on insider/ outsider dynamics in families, classrooms, and communities. Who holds the knowledge, who administers the power, and whose authority dominates the social order is clearly depicted in "The Outsider". This story turns an insightful lens on human nature, and the binary oppositions that arise when exclusionary biases dominate an individual's perspective. I would argue, as many of the research participants did, that 97 humans have a choice to judge others on the basis of appearances whether to be open or closed to outsiders; by looking inward through reflective practice, the community members in the story who remained open were enriched with warmth and fellow feeling; the unreflective people seemed insensitive and emotionally impoverished by reacting with contempt, rejection, and fear. Toward the end of this segment, Nevada collapses in the snow while hunting moose. The final scene shows the nurse, Sarah, and an Elder discussing the need for confidentiality in regards to Nevada's temporary care after he confesses to being HIV positive. A glimpse of community members appearing as shadowy figures in the background is a foreshadow of their emotional distancing from the situation that results in Nevada's removal from Lynx River in a later episode. Because Joey's teachings about survival in the wilderness depend on acquired knowledge in relation to the natural world, he is unable to help Nevada whose lived experience has taken him to the streets of Vancouver. Although Joey and Nevada share a common understanding of parental negligence, the former has access to extended family support whereas the latter has had no one to offer shelter and advice during adolescence. Of the four stories, the "Outsider" was least discussed as a memorable story during the wrap-up interviews. I thought, perhaps, the second language learners might identify with some aspects of being an outsider. Interestingly, the native speakers of English had more to say on this topic, since a few participants elaborated in their reflective written responses about being teased, taunted, and 98 . marginalized by their literate peers in their earlier school experience. The scars of feeling like an outsider generated empathy for Nevada and admiration for Joey's forgiving nature. Finally, "Safe Home" brought out the hurt child that yearns to feel safe and secure both at home and in a community. The participants wrote their responses during the workshop, so they had less time to reflect on their own experiences or empathy for a child's suffering when the adult world he inhabits cannot provide the emotional nourishment he needs to grow as a healthy multi-dimensional human being. Charlie is portrayed as a strong survivor, but his situation provides an opportunity for adults to discuss and reflect on a child's needs and desires beyond the basic shelter, food, and clothing. On the second reading of the text, I paused in several places to give the research participants, opportunities to discuss the symbolic meaning, verbal and non-verbal messages, and the emotions being conveyed in particular situations. The Four R's—relationship, responsibility, respect, and reverence—articulate the key elements of mind, body, and spirit development. The participants identified qualities that create a safe home environment. They considered social services in their own community to provide support for both children and adults. * * * * * * * * Children of earth and sky and sea/grow as one large family/ listen to the songs of trees/let our light awaken dreams/ dance our sorrows in the rain/in our hearts the sun remains/ 99 when the rocks tell mysteries/they will share our histories show us ways to think and see/what to do and how to be song of growing differently/treat each one respectfully. I reflect back on my time spent with participants in the pilot project in order to consider the reasons why written responses from this group mainly focussed on factual details about the story, and no one mentioned this story during the interviews. Like Charlie and Michelle, I was in survivor mode during the pilot project, fighting to regain strength after physical and emotional trauma. In retrospect, I was unable at that time to flesh out depthful knowing (van Manen, 1990, p. 153) in the participants, and needed time to heal and essentially rebirth myself in order to be fully capable of entering into Charlie's experience, ready to inspire the participants in later groups to empathize with a child's way of being, seeing, knowing. Reflections on Oral and Written Responses Participant: Jane Since Jane referred to my suggested guidelines for her written responses that I provided at the first workshop, her oral and written responses have been selected to introduce the research study participants at Site One. Jane was the only Canadian English speaker who chose to sit close to the front and joined the group of second language learners. She attended four workshops and submitted written responses for each story. While always respectful of other's points of view, she unhesitatingly expressed strong opinions both during the group discussions and in her reflective written responses. In print, her voice speaks as does in person with honest candor. I have selected her untitled response to the story, "Crime and Punishment." Note that for the main research project, the same story is referred to as "Corrections." Who: Policet Hichc^eV daAM^hter had/ju^t droxv w. Afender: M)QlCaMMacJs}etbatye/18 wa^coiA^htwith/drug^ On/hiypocket. 1. Ve^crCbe/ what happened/ On/the/ T.V. he^wventfrcrm/ "hJcnthof60". M Och&eM/the/police/ crffvcer hoid/ju&t cotvie/from/ Catenary cmd/looiCng/her daM^hterto-d^-aMJung/ Alottw very cond^XorwhadycuM^htW afender with/drug^ Cn/hCypoclcet. 2. Whatprevuytwknxrwled^^dXd/ top Co? Only thOng^I'v ^ een/on/t.v. read/ Uvthe/pcCper cvnd/ herd/cm/the/routCo-. It cn/be/cutwo-way street when/Ct come^to-people/. Power and/conflectwcvy a/be^/problem/. V Offerent people/ look/ at different frtuatiovw. 3. What new {AxfyrYVuztiondXd/you/lea^rwahou^ topic? I hadslearn&d/a/lot because/1 don/'twhata/wholes oft.v. But watcJxiYigsthlfr show you/aree^po^e/toevery day livings When/watchXng/thiy orvt.v. it realy make/yowopen/ your eye& cind/you/ }&on/ that we/haA/e/ a/lot toole<^ We/ are/ aH people/ reguxudle^y of color, race/ or badegroud/. Wh& ttCU/cannot except people/for who-they are/and/not whatthey are/. 4. Do yow agree/ or dA&xgree/ with the/ wr itery point of view? Yey, I agree/ with the/ writer. Everything/iy not a^ it Should/ be/ in/the/ real/ world/. To loxyhatthiy^how whe/^ee people/ react whew under dXfftiMt cxmdJtion/Huh/a>y MichaeXle/who-had/jutt lost her child; and/WdlCam/the/ youg/ afend/who knew Ju&t what to tfvy to get: Michaell/ going/. Unle&ypeOple/change/the/ way they think/, the/ problem/ won't go away. We/the/people/ha^e/to- change/ with/ in our^eXf. we/ haA/e/to-^tat with/that. Then/we/ mlg^xtlxK)h(xt people/fronv other c&utuey differently. Hiuviay'Beinjgy, with/one/heat. minds y>td/. 5. Evctiuat&th&ttyctfrom/yoiM'- point of view. from/ my point of view mlhaeeVpolicer office/ should/ not have/come/ bach to- work/ yrfa^t and/ eypedUy with out her partner. Not mabCng/ up ejccu&efr fhr how bhe/ treated/M)(Xliam/th£/youtyafen(der. but bhe/way under very ciificult (XnAdtttorwJu4tlorning-her daughter to-drawing/. WClliam/cm/the/other hand/ knew what wordy to- bay to- get M ichaeh goinfy Von/t agree/with/the/hitting/ and/ showCn^/WCCUam/ to-the/ grand/. 'By dxyUv^ that thatJu^it gave/William/ more/ rea^cm/to- %ay and/ dxr more/thing&towarciy the/ polce/ officer which/ca^Med/more/beating/ With/ bticfotfoe/ fitting/ and/Uy remarhybyWilXCam/. Halfthrough/th^bhowycn^cotdd/teU/by bothpatie^ that thinly were/ changing' 103 wcvycLrOnks, ywujke/, do-drug&and/he/cxyuXdvvt do-avxy better what. uncourgemeMXrfrom/o&i&pe^ MCclwM/who-aX&o-faln^ not right. Treating thCy they xwvzy here/ people* wcvy treated/. Thcvtywhy ^ he/lefhCm/go. €veyoney need^ a/ chantey to- %md/hXm/under the/tree/. She/took/ him/ back/ ivi&ide/. Then bhe/ ejlaLned/ situation to- the/ police/ officer. They bhe/ went away (tcr neptfoir). She/ abked/ police/ woman togivehim/lunch. The/little/boy atked/the/police/ officer, "Voyovu have/ any children/?" She/ wcvy quiet for about 2 minutey. LittLe/boy a^ked/her why the/ had/thoie/toy y (in the/room/). Then/boy adced/Of he/ could/watcht.v. Police/officer bald/no bO-Uttle/boy ran away a^cun. I don/thnoM) where/ it Vy go- to go- now. The/ little/boy'y Mum/way yich—cUdn/tbay if Cllne&y. Police/ officer seemed/ upbet—Memoriey are/ corning/bach. Voeyn/thnow how to-deab with them/. LittLe/boy feeling/paJin/ - and/gety mad/boon/. (the instructor stopped recording David's reflections at this point to attend to the needs of a student who was not involved in the study, causing a slight break in the flow of ideas; the researcher took over as scribe.) The/ little/ boy learnt what made/police/ lady bo bad/—bhe/ told/ him/ what happened/to her hid/. The/ young-boy gota/littXe/pre^entfor the/police/lady because/bhe/ wcoy bad/—-wanted/ to make/ her -feel' better. The/little/boy wayyxppo^ed*to-leave/the*town* He/wentto-police/lady'yoffice/. 'Before/, the/police/ lady apologised/, e^cplcvined/ bhe/ way bad/. Social Service/lady couldnttake/boy to-Stately— not allowed/ any luggage/ doing/ her Job: The/Social Service/lady tried/to-gralr little/ boy becauye*doe$nJt want to- leave/him/there/. The/ little/ boy way bcrewmlng-. "She/ wanty to- ytay. she/ doeyn't want to- go-. She/ hatey her." The/little* ovtyixle/fell/orwhiyhne&y, thenran/bade*to-police/ lady. Police/lady yxld*yhe/would/keep him/. They went to- Sara/yplace/to-play cardy. A man/walked/ into- card/play wogp and/he/bat b&yide/ Michelle/. Charlie/thinhyhe/cheaty. Man/not Ontereytecl in/playing* yy- he/ left. Michelle/went bach to-playing* and/ Charlie/ yxid/ men/ are/ okay until they ytartbeatVng-up o-nyou*. Charlie/ got into- with M ichelle* and/ she/yelled* at him/ to- go-back/ to- hiy own/bed*. He* made*breahfayt but Michelle/ wayn't happy. At the* grave/, Charlie* come/ there/ and/ give/ tobarcoa^pre^ntbiAtMichelle/wayyxd/. Charlie/ 114 went tcr the/ cur strip and'MioheU^fcn^rui/him/there/. C h a r l i e / d a u g h t e r beazw&yheswafroubooT^like/hfa Michelle/ feely a/ lot &f paiw a*id/they bothfeekbad/. David's recall of facts and details from a story allowed him to participate fully in the discussion. I had worked with him as a tutor, one-on-one, in a private space away from the classroom and noted his keen observations and insights as we discussed his assigned readings, goals, and dreams for a better future. Schank (1990) argues that "story" involves knowledge, intelligence, and memory. "Knowledge is experiences and stories, and intelligence is the apt use of experience and the creation and telling of stories. Memory is memory for stories, and the major processes of memory are the creation, storage, and retrieval of stories" (p. 16). In my view, David's general knowledge, intelligence/and memory allowed him equal access to stories through oral and/or visual media, but he felt frustrated by his limited ability to decode print. The modest gains he made in decoding language at the fundamental level were not enough, however, to keep him attending class. Significantly, David identified "writing" with a scribe as the most meaningful part of the study for him. Seeing his oral dictation in print form gave permanence to his knowledge and reflections. I sensed that his ability to read much of his dictated text also touched him deeply since he spoke with pride about his ability to retain factual information and articulate his thoughts clearly. 115 Embodiment a man's voice shakes, little boy speaks full moon eyes against a midnight sky memories startle from silent space responding again to Charlie's cry never go back, never warp the mind to hate the teacher, but hate her whip that bloodied mud-soft little boy hands, then dragged himself home, an hour's trip, fear quit little boy going to school hot, dusty classroom and tortured screams learning held hostage by words so cruel. until the salve of years healed clean. * * * * * * * * Early abandonment—emotional, physical, spiritual abandonment—leaves the tender child in an adult body bent, broken, left to wither away, yet still alive to grieve. David came to mind when I received an email message with a description of a watercolour collection inspired by a woman on a silent, early morning walk during a retreat. On the walk, Hazel became aware of the voices of birds that seemed to be asking her to be more observant, to pay attention to the sacredness of nature in order to better understand the spirituality of the Cree people in her region. Looking inward for a sign, a direction to move toward, an answer came in the form of a flower. She had been admiring a purple Monkshood flowerstock "reaching for the sky, beautiful and strong. After several days, I noticed that the stock had been broken and the flowers hung down to the ground. I remember saying, vOh, what a waste. That was so beautifull. Why would someone do that?1.. .because it had not just fallen over; it had been broken 116 and then begun to turn and reach for the sun again." Amazingly, the new flowers had "the same green that was in the leaves that grew from the stock before the break." I thought of David, the rejection he'd suffered in school as a child, and his return that was short-lived but ever hopeful, life greening anew. N: What did you learn about native people and their culture? D: Well, what I know is like when you get into different places where you don't, um, really, us, like used to or like belong there or whatever, you know, it's like it's different to cooperate with other people. Learn from them, like you know, more like they get, like, put down sometime, you know. They don't really like, you know, communicate that great. Some of them. N: They seem to communicate a little bit differently, don't they. D: Ya. Ya, so it's a little bit different. N: Do you remember which episode had the biggest impact on you to make you think about your own life? D: Well, from the experience from the police lady and the little boy . . . N: Mmmm. D: You know it's like she was dealin' with her own problem and she couldn't cope with that little boy, you know. Little boy don't got a big problem like police lady do because little boy can like understand, you know, but when it reach certain aspect is, you know, police lady cannot cooperate with it, so needs some more time to get over with her angry to move on. N: And what was that calling up in you, in your own life? 117 D: Well, lots of people have been hurt before but a lot of people move on. Right? But some people seem like they just can't get about it. It's kinda hard, you know, for some people to break that ice, you know, to move on. N: What do you think helps people move on? D: Well, you got a choice other people and be strong again. N: What was the most meaningful experience for you? Watching the media texts or discussing the main ideas or writing your responses? D: Like writin' my responses 'cause from like different culture what I see up on the screen is like, you know, exactly what certain people go through and stuff like that so it come to sounds like those things really exist in real life, As David had the most difficulty writing of all the participants, I think this reference to writing has special significance: 1) his desire to write and think of himself as a writer, and 2) his ability to recall memories and connect his lived experiences to the story appeared to be more satisfying when, with the help of a scribe, he was able to see his ideas in print. In the next comment, it is obvious that David's active listening and reflective thinking operated simultaneously as he "read" the stories. N: Did the episodes seem real or phony to you? D: They seemed real because you can see what happened; meanwhile the Aim. is rollin' and you're just thinkin' of something of what coulda be happenin', you know, and it doesn't work out the way you think it happen so, you know, it's like, you know, go the other way aroun' so . . . 118 N: Is that like life? D: Ya. That things change sometime. N: Do you have any interest in a media literacy course? D: Well, not much but I wouldn't mind, um, you know do a little. N: You have a good memory, don't you? D: Ya. Participant: Rena Rena's responses to the television stories from North of 60 focussed on marginalized youth and her experiences in an urban setting rather than on the situational conflicts in the stories. I found Rena to be searching for meaning through external forms, such as style and appearance, in an attempt to disrupt and break free from social constraints. Her dress code, bold make-up, zany nail polish, and feisty personality created spectacle reminiscent of Bakhtin's notion of carrtivalesque. From my perspective, however, Rena tested her boundaries and resisted dominant values as a means of discovering her personal identity rather than being motivated by subversive attitudes and/ or behaviours. In fact, Rena expressed conservative views and took a strong, individualist position among the participants when discussing Harris's betrayal of TeeVee, believing that Harris should be punished for his actions. Yet, her flair for tragic comedy and the melodramatic set her apart from the group. 119 Fiske (1987) writes about children's cartoons and comedies that test the boundaries and "frequently invert "normal' relationships and show the adult as incompetent, unable to understand, and the children as superior in insight and ability""(p. 242). I thought of Rena while reading this passage. She spoke with authority and used style, not as a form of degradation, but to sensationalize, to draw attention to the body as a political statement. According to Fiske, style that performs as a function of carnival "is essentially liberating, acting as an empowering language for the subordinate" (p. 249) in response to being a member of the dispossessed in society. "The carnival is both a product and a celebration of the yawning gap between the interests and experiences of the dominant and the subordinated in white patriarchal capitalism" (p. 249). In both oral and written expression, Rena appeared to experience more discontinuity than connection to the representation of social issues in the stories. Outsider WeHfrom/ my knowledge/ coy a/youth/or young/adult and/helping^atreetkldyfor 6 yeary voieentarly I have/ beenplenty. When/ a/teenager that convey -from/ a/ different tow n or provence/ he/ or ihe/frCythttthe/ common/ area/—the/ mall/for example/ to- cheackout the/&een, what pe&pb wear how they act and/ who- Jy the/ On crouds. Then/ a&uaZly a/ weeb or yr later they retur n the/ malls dre^ed/ ay as certain crouds es. g<: Skater looh ~ baggy parity, colored/ naXly inhlue/or black/, tack/shirt, diyed/hair and/ ifher or she/ doey't smoke/, they start. He/or she/pick/the/Spot most common/to croued/they want. Stories are/ made/ up Lfhe/ or she/get notised/. Ifnotthey sit On a comer or bax^ are^watching/peob wish/for company. Every day he/or she/if alooner wiXUsitalone/and/ venture/ off on oww and/ may devlop depression/and/ become/ sucidiab. If he/ or she/ iy in the/ in/ crowd/ then, partvey start, drugy, stealing^ tnad/. Lie/after lie/wCtbde^lope/.He/or she/puty aM>ay the/ivyvma^ge/ the/once/knew and/become/some/other face/. But uwMy problem^deylop Cn/the/faryuXy and/they probaUy drop out of school/or skip a/lot. Always in trubble/, Ofhe/or she/screwy up (makeevng/ slavey had/ no- any right or-freedom/. The/fact cant not be- denied, from/ watching/ thiy short episode/ of North/ of 60. I rather Uke/to-thinh thi&tea/on£/ofa/sad/,unhjtypyside/oflif& happens quite/ often On our society though/I know thly could/be/caused/by white/people^ y" privelege/. Humcmbeing/ iy sort of (Xrvviplecate/; inhere/I saw Uarriy weak/part of human/being/. Definitely he/ is not a wian with a/ good/ character. This Tclnd/ op character person/ we/ see/ in everywhere/ in this world/. I don/'twant myself to easylyjump [retro a/ conclusion/ and/say itisaprLvelege/. let uyloxjh around/ ourselves lives. we/ see/ a/ mother probably treat differently to her children. A teacher or a/ boss-hays' he/ or her favorite/ person/whom/ been treated/ withprivelege< The/ controversy of the/head/ta^o-for the/ earlier Chinese/ immigrants appears often/. Now, some/young/ Chinese/ fight with/Canada government for compensation/. Why let ay forgive/ the/government that they did/ wrong- to Chinese/. They were/privelege/discrimination/a^d/very wrong- (nthe/past. We know it, but dont drag- this history's burden/ aW the- tOme. Letyloxyh forward/ future/. Today, we/stdl/have/a/long-way togoon/ this field/ and/ to- get equlaly treatment between ail the-races. But I really yyrry -for yyme/victimythat they always too empha^iy^e/ on this issue/. Whenever they caught a chance/ to deal on/this issue/, they go ytraightforward^to-bue/bylaM). And/thlyU^^ became/ into- cu matnpoint of matter. The/privelege/betsveen/ iw different raceyhay happening/biA%c^the/dAMvn of man/. How to-educate/ ay notto-be/privel&ge/iya/big/i^u&to-diwute/. 3ut to-make/it eayy cind/timple/way Lylet ay to-be/ humble/, modest and/ thoughtful/ for eve4ytbungy around/ay. That not only include/human/but al^antmaly, plasty and/ even/ no-live^ of irwiroment. "to be silenced by the stillness of reflection—" van Manen, 1990, p. 99 Participant: Don I mentioned Don in the introduction as one of the Canadian English speakers who participated in three stories but chose not to submit written responses to any. He and another student who was not involved in the research study were creating dialogue for an in-class project which took priority over the written component of the research study. I encouraged him to submit brief responses if that was all he had time for; however, he chose not to. While conducting interviews, however, Don asked me to read the first draft of their script which showed creativity and acute awareness of cadence and nuance in spoken language that had been transferred quite authentically into 133 written dialogue. I wondered if his listening skills were gaining stimulation while he read the television stories and then left before the discussion to work on his script, but I never thought to probe this possibility at the time. Since Don requested an interview, I have included his views on Native reserves that stems, in part, from his lived experiences in the fishing industry. N: You mentioned in class that it was a culture that you were familiar with, so you found some things that.... D: No, it's not a culture that I'm not familiar with. It's just that it didn't reflect on the cultures I've been to. I have been on Indian reserves and we have gotten boats, but the same problems they're having in "North of 60" aren't, I can't draw a line between some of the reserves that I've been on. N: Okay. That's important. How are they different? D: Financial problems. A lot of the financial problems that they were having with the funding the reserves on most or a couple of reserves I've been on—one in Ontario and one in Manitoba—they didn't have the financial problems that they did on "North of 60". So, they had enough money to do their repairs, keep their, ah, maintaining of the reserves, ah, not like "North of 60". N: Where they had the housing problem and shortage of houses. D: Right, right. N: Ya. D: And, also, education-wise for Native Canadians—there was all sorts of programs available for Native Canadians when I was in Manitoba. 134 N: Mm hm. D: Ah, that if you had Native status, that you really had priority in the school system as to upgrade and go into other courses which was paid for by the Indian Bands, so that wasn't the same as "North of 60" either where they were fighting for the finances just to keep the reserve going. And lookin' for money. I asked Don which of the three stories struck a chord with him, and he first spoke about issues raised in "Competition" and further along in the interview, he directed his thoughts to the conflict between Michelle and William. Excerpts that reflect on prejudice and resentment follow. D: I think the thing that really upset me about [Competition] was the prejudisms, the prejudism between white and native, ah, right through the whole show almost everyone was "we're not gettin' no money from the whites, or we're gettin', um, (pause) they sort of drew a line where it's almost like whites are responsible, and as I say, not being on any reserve or seein' it that way, it's hard for me to draw the line, but the prejudisms towards the whites, and I think there were mentioning about somethin' (pause) that's what happens when you have one race, like natives living separate from white communities, of being segregated, um. N: Well, it's the majority /minority thing isn't it. D: Right. In Don's opinion, the percentage of non-native people on the reserve at Lynx River gave a realistic portrayal, but he disagreed with what he perceived to 135 be an imbalance in ethnic representation. We could have discussed the historical roots of reservations, and why there are few non-native people living there. However, that would be an entire course far beyond the scope of this research study. He expressed strong views that laws governing one ethnic group should apply to all Canadians, or alternatively, non-native people living on reserves should have the same rights as native people [in the context of fishing rights]. Don felt the situations in the stories did not accurately portray his experiences with native people. D: It's just not that way from what I've seen. Ah, it may be different in British Columbia. Natives may be different than Manitoba Natives or Ontario Natives. Ah, I can't see because I've never been to a reserve out here, but I have been in Ontario and Manitoba and it's not the way it's portrayed on "North of 60". I valued the fact that Don actively questioned the visual representations, contested their validity, and reflected on the intersections of his lived experience in relation to the situations in the stories. He struggled, however, to put his thoughts in writing. When I first asked him why he had not submitted any written responses, he changed the subject. Later, I asked again because I wanted to determine the reason for his lack of participation in this aspect of the study. In part, his other story took "almost two and a half weeks" full time while other assignments remained in limbo, but he did, apparently, write notes. N: So, it was mainly an issue of time, not a difficulty in writing. 136 D: No. No. And, ya, I did in some parts, ah, when I was writin' down some key notes on what was happening in the stories, that putting it together, separating what I thought in my writing from what's happening on the show and I found myself getting caught in the same paragraph all the time, just trying to put my reflections into a paragraph or trying to describe what I saw. The need to get it r ight . . . a recurrent theme at other sites, too. To clear space for reflecting on the tensions of one's own reality in response to situational realities in the stories takes time and energy to process the incoming information. An important observation that Don made in reference to the story about Michelle and William was the cyclic nature of abuse "so they were feeding each other", yet he also remembered the rapport that developed between them after both reflected on the situation, how their behaviour not only inflamed the violence by reacting from instinct, but also how change occurred by responding to reason. Reclaiming the human power to reason and make choices opened mutual lines of communication. In the final analysis, hopeful images create space for re-imagining other ways of being-respectful in relationship with self and other. Participant: Dawn Dawn is a second language learner whose experience in elementary school had left memories of exclusion and difference. As soon as she felt equal and valued by a group, she flourished. Having spent some time with her in a reading circle, I noted an increase in her group participation over time. Competition/ In/the/ytory of "the/ north of 60'y" Teevee/ looked/ like/ a/ victim/ becaM^e/ he/ could/ not get Harriyy recommendation/ in/the/training programme/. However, I noticed/the/true/victim/ iy HarriyhCm&elf. In/the/ytory he/kept only ing^to-Teevee/, and/the/iwiage/he/gcwe/in/the/whole/event wa^obvioayci/ba^guy. Actually he/wa¬that bad/. He/ wa^yjayt threaten/ by Teevee/ y youth/, enthusiasm/and/amhituon. He/lled/be&cwA^e/he/ could/ not directly tell/the/true/ anxl/thatwiXbruln/ their relationship, especially itwCU/hurt Loiy' feeling: In my opinion/, Harriy way a^xldentically arranged/ in/ an/ awhward/poiltion/. He/ way neither richnoryhoung/. He/cdttr did/not have/self -confindent and/ did/ not much/ understand/TeeveeJy personality. He/jayt needed/survival/. I hope/Teevee/ will/ forgive/him/. Dawn balanced factual and descriptive responses in each story, r reflective connections between the characters' lives and her own lived 138 experience. In terms of quantity, Dawn's submissions varied, depending on her interest in the main idea. Amazingly, she produced three hand-written, double-spaced pages in a half hour during the final workshop, demonstrating her ability to comprehend the message and make meaningful connections despite her limited exposure to English grammar and sentence structure. I would not characterize Dawn as a leader, but diligence and a keen desire to express her ideas in her group seemed to motivate her to speak on topics that held special meaning for her and write creatively and reflectively. For the interview, I want to focus mainly on what she learned about native people and their culture from the four stories and discussions. D: Mmm. The kind of people, they are, they are what.. .they have, how can I say, close together. They have their own feeling. Mmm. Native people not same as us. Every culture they want to protect it and their culture, you know. N: Their traditions. D: Ya, ya. Don't want to lose it. Same. Every culture same. I think so, ya. The protections and just what position you are and where you are. How come I don't understand why people want to separate, but they separated themselves, only. I don't understand. N: On reservations? D: Ya, ya. N: Why do you think people live there? 139 D: I don't know. When you, how can I say. When I come to Canada and Chinese people go to a circle group, and when sometime and I came to certain place, I try to greet the people but the people don't, don't, don't what, don't want to [welcome] m e . . . even they don't know I can't speak English, lean feel something. They don't speak. I can feel something. I not belong there. That's the truth. And, it's real strange that if you the same culture, the same culture people refer to very naturally. I don't know why, but I don't know that way. N: If somebody put you up north with just a few other Chinese people, what do you think the purpose would be in doing that? D: I don't understand your question. N: Well, you mentioned how native people live on reservations, um, and I'm just trying to get you to reflect on why white people would have done that to native people. D: They have a threaten. Just like. It's real strange, um, to me my experience, in my own country any foreigner who go to visit our country they don't say anything. We don" feel they will do what. They will own our land. They will get to be the boss in our country. We don't fear that kind of thing, but when I come to Canada, I think the people were very threaten. Is it fretten? N: Afraid? Frightened? D: Yes, frightened. We were being affected. It seems to give me the feeling you not belong here. You are coming to here and just own our land. Ah, how can I say? Get our benefit, but they don't understand. 140 In the above dialogue, Dawn was referring to the dominant culture who seemed threatened. She generalized all immigrants as employed taxpayers with homes and possessions. "Everybody come here the same. I think so." However, when I mentioned that the non-native colonialists in Canada also gave native people a feeling they did not belong on the land their ancestors had inhabited for centuries, she began to see a pattern. "They're afraid to be cultural," she said. The interview revealed an immigrant's experience of racism despite Canada's multicultural policies and diverse population. We touched on the dynamics of power over another culture which maintains control through isolation. The reservation experience imposed human isolation and limitation in a controlled space by other humans who gained power and control but lost a feeling of genuine welcome given to them by the native people. As I reflected on Dawn's experience of not belonging, I became acutely aware of Paulo Freire's cycle of oppressor/oppressed. Becoming the oppressors cost non-native settlers of this land to reject a feeling of welcome in their relation to the first peoples. To this day, the dominant, non-native majority uses power and control to provide an external sense of ownership; however, from my experience with people who express racist views in relations of power, there is also a loss of welcome that becomes negatively reciprocated. 141 Ownership you are feeling sad, my landlady says because i have isolated you, forbidden your human rights on our land, my indifferent brother, seller of spirits barks at your powerless heels certain of his place. your pagan ceremonies offend our place opt to be like us, displaced she/he/they talk mindlessly in unison my spirit hides in the garden, waiting to re grow the texture of my heart mortgaged unwelcome * * * * * * * * * Participant: Toan Her voice demands to know. "Why do you put a comma here?" I shrug and try to explain that in some grammar texts a comma is used while others no longer add commas to separate. Phrases flow into independent clauses into dependent clauses so it is best to check with the instructor because gray hairs like me grew up with commas. "English is so hard. You can never be sure." I agree. Invented spellings frequently make more sense than rules that break at the turn of a letter. I remember how earnestly Joan wanted to know the rules. Eye due knot cair four rewels she sez Her writing for the first three stories was neatly typed in Bold on a computer with interesting fonts and a strict format. The sentences, mostly simple structure, were numbered and categorized. She established a pattern to present her written reflections. For example, "The Outsider" had 3 headings with 5 sentences referring to the heading, "Nevada'; 8 for "Native', and 3 for "Summary'. I have selected "Safe Home" because it shows her writing without the help of grammar and spell checks which she meticulously used for her other submissions. Safe/Homes 1) The girl/wa^-given/up by mother. 2) She/stayed/with social/worker, but she/came/to MCcheUe/'yhou^with&utci^ 3) M CcheUe/ thought her dxu^ghter wevy watching-the/ T.V. It wousn/t. There/ way a small boy called/ Charley. A) The/small/boy wanted/to-find/outMlcheUe/why she/ dldn/t happy when/ they saw each/ other. 5) Later the/ymaWboy wanted/to-stay with Michelle/, because/he/ thought he/ could/ solve/ M icheUe/'y p roblemy. 6) MicheUe/waA^ted/Charle^becaM^he/wa^the/ reminder of her daughter. 7) The/ first time/ Charles wanted/ to- tell M CoheUe-she would/be/back/tohly mother and/sox>n/get better instead/ of staying/ Here; 143 1) MCcheU&retyected/fh&irma^ could/get cilong/later. 2) Michelle/ really vm^ed/her daughter, thatwa^y the/reason/ why bhe/ wished/tohelp the/boy. 3) The/tmaXbbxyy ivviagvned/he/could/replace/ Michelle/y daughter. 1) The/small/boy mudc/brecCkfci4tforMicheU^,b^ loved/hCy mother. Michelle/loved/her daughter. They were/thwklngshow tolyring/down/the/wall/ wluch/ wcuyju&t in front of them/. In this version, Joan indicated her usual format of segmentation without headings. On the day of the interviews, she submitted another version of "Safe Home", saying her handwriting had been a mess and she wanted me to read her typewritten response. With this fourth story, more variety appears in her sentence structure. She is using semicolons and understands the placement of a comma after a dependent clause that begins a sentence. These are clearly technical improvements from her first submission. Interestingly, certain details of the story shift in importance, showing slight inconsistency between the half-hour, spontaneous response and her later response. For example, the image of Charlie and Michelle "thinking how to bring down the wall which was just in front of them" crystallizes in my mind their emotional barriers that prevented mutual understanding; however, this profound insight was not included Joan's revision. The second version follows for the reader's comparison. M icheUe/ 1) MicheUe/entered/the/howse/; bhe/thoughther daughter wayathome: 2) Ihe/socials worker hcvynt informed/ her that Charley way iw her homes. 3) When/ Charley slept with/her (rvthe/ middle/ of the/ night, she/ felt so- started/, imagining/her daughter way beside/her. 4. After M icheUe/ and Charley y relation/ become/ better, Michelle/wished/to- keep Charley living/ with/ her. 5. She/ deyired/ to- see/ her daughter'y tombstone/; it reminded/her how much/she/loved/her daughter. Charley 1. Charley wanted/ to- say he/ would/ be/ home/ later. It wouldn/t have/ bothered/ M icheUe/. 2. Charley helped/ mlchelle/ to-prepare/ breakfast tcr gaivx/her favour and make/Michelle/ wish/hlm/to-stay with/her. 3. He/tried/to struggle/ with the/ yyx^ab worker against going- elsewhere/. 4. He/displayed/anger when MCcheUe/refuted/to-accept hiy offerivvgp of tobacco at the/ grave/. 5. Heuvmpleofmy feeling/ Ly in the North of 60 segment where' Nevada who- come/ from/ the/big/ oCty (Vancouver) and/he/ way trying/ to- fit in withaU/the/re^ddentyofthe/vMage/. The/ way Nevada did/thiy way that he/ made/ up a story alyxyut him/ and/hoy father firing/ aharpoow at sea/llony. The/problem/withthiywosythatthesNcxtive/ Americans novo use/ guny instead/of harpoon^ for hunting. As a result of this simple/ mistake/ the/ vdlagery did/ not cuzcept him/ ay cv member ofthiy society. for an example/of this-On/ my own/life- Oythat from/ gradeytwo until/ eight I attended/ a/ Christian Schoral/and/then I wertftopublic yzhoxytfor gradey nine until/twelve-. Thiy transition/ Onto grade/ nine/ wooyone/that way very difficult. You/see/, at the-Christian school/, there- way no- one- there- tellingsme-that I looked/bad/or that my clothy were/not ay fathionable/uy their clothyare/. The/ difficulty came/ when/1 wenttothe/pubUc/school/. What happened/ wcoy there- were/ quite/ a/ few of the/popular people/ who yaw the/way I looked/when I walked/in the-school/and/they branded/ay a/"nerd/'. It took me/ untd/ grade/ eleven to fOnally gcilnthe- respect of my peery. I am/now much a/part of the society. By listening in the gap where painful school experiences resurface, John re-visits feelings of alienation and difference during adolescence when the suffering of separation from peers through mockery and intimidation can inflict such a deep sense of wounding that learning becomes impossible. When an individual becomes isolated from the group, aggression spills forth in a variety 165 of abusive ways. In the short time I spent with John, I overheard an occasional snide remark or putdown directed towards him, and he responded outwardly with patience and humour. His demeanour showed "humility, living with grace in the midst of oppression, finding justice with joy, and learning strength through gentleness" (Carlson, 1994, p. 19). The incidents alerted me to conditions of subtle disrespect that mar a learning environment because everyone in the same space absorbs the negative energy whether consciously or unconsciously. Rather than refer to a specific story, John wanted to discuss his method of getting ideas down on paper. He mentioned that writing lets out feelings, and he learned from a classmate to just write with an openness and receptivity to whatever thoughts begin to flow onto the page. From there, he talked about power struggles and what he learned from the characters' actions. J: Well, let's see, um, there was the one about the power struggle. It was real interesting to see how people act and then they think about what they did. It's like, um, I'm workin' on that too. For me, it's not the fact that I act before I think. I say before I think and now I'm trying to think before I say it. John related that a powerful course he'd taken sometime in the past had been helpful to observe and then reflect on "what I'm doing in my life and stuff like that." N: Did watching "North of 60" do that for you? J: Ya. Like the things that they said triggered something in my mind and then as you've noticed/it sparked something and I just go, like I just run with it. N: So, it stimulated your writing. J: Ya, ya. N: Good. What influenced your writing the most? The visual impressions created by the camera, the problems that the characters were experiencing, or your own knowledge and questioning about what you knew? J: It was a collaboration of what the characters were feeling and then what I already had and it brought it. Like what the characters went through brought out in my own self. N: So, your past knowledge and the new information were put together. J: Ya. N: And was that, ah, useful in your own understanding? J: Ya, 'cause it, I mean, as I say I don't get much chance to tell people about my problems because, I don't know, other people's problems seem to be bigger than mine, but it's a big enough one that I should be talking about it to get it off my chest. The above information signals to me, again, the importance of discussion and social interaction. In the idiomatic language of getting something off one's chest, a counsellor might work with this embodied space where emotions seem to be contained. John knows the emotional costs of not belonging, so the significant story for him was "The Outsider". J: It took me from Grade 9 till Grade 111 had a problem with [belonging]. Like, the first day> something stuck, right, and it stuck for two years till I went to 167 Grade 11 iri High School and I started working with Special Needs kids and then, because like all the principals and stuff like that, they liked me working with Special Needs kids. I kinda got to know the principals and vice-principals and teachers a lot, so they told me to like block it out of mind and just worry about myself because they said that those people who were putting me down, or like insecure about Special Needs kids themselves, and that's why they put me down for working with them, so I shot past that and look at me now. I have no problem now with what other people say because along with, in that course there was a feedback section and, so what it is you take it with your head and you give it with your heart. If you take it with your heart, like if you take what people say with your heart, it's going to tear you down. N: It plays tricks in your head. J: Oh, does it ever. So, now that I've learned to take it with my head, it does nothing to me. Like it's just words. Right? I mean the odd thing does slip past and go down to my heart, but who doesn't. It's just human to do that. Right? At this point, a background in counselling psychology would be an asset. John said that when hurtful messages involve body reactions "it stops you from living and it cripples you". Based on his lived experience, he could identify with Michelle's dis-ease toward Charlie in "Safe Home" and noticed that his long hair triggered an illusion of Hanna, her deceased daughter, that clouded Michelle's judgement when responding to Charlie. On a human level, John spoke with insight and empathy about the characters' problems, yet on a cultural level, he admitted that his knowledge of Native culture "was like teepees and stuff like that. Like from T.V. Right? N: Mm hm. J: But, ah, wel l . . . N: Elaborate on that. Teepees. What else did you know? J: Well, horses and, ah, like cowboy and Indian times, but there's obvious, but it was more realistic than what you see on movies and stuff, 'cause (pause) N: Did it seem like a real community to you? J: Ya. Ya. Um, there's one movie, it's called "Maverick' with Mel Gibson and they have these Indians and, ah, it was really interesting, 'cause like they were, ah, just trying to impress this, um, Russian Archduke, or whatever, so they had the teepees, but they live, obviously they live normal lives, and so they were just dressed up in the Indian stuff, like the old, traditional stuff just to impress the guys, but they were talking English and stuff. It's funny to see how people portray it, like how they see them and how they really are. N: Right. There's a difference, isn't there? J: Mm hm. N: Ya. J: The stereotypes. N: Ya. J: That we all have in our head and then when you meet a real native person... N: Ya. 169 J: They're just like you arid I are. Coming to see the other, not as an object but as another subject requires both reflection and action. To acknowledge stereotypical images, challenge the validity of such images, internalize the reflective process that leads to a realization that stereotypes are distortions of reality, and then take action to actually experience a body, mind, spirit shift in consciousness moves the learner to a transformative space so that assimilatation of new knowledge with past knowledge and new information occurs. Freire (1998) writes, "To teach is not to transfer knowledge but to create the possibilities for the production or construction of knowledge" (p. 30). Such breakthrough knowledge ruptures perceived boundaries, opening space for conscious personal and social change. Participant: Ellen Ellen refused to write a reflective response journal during the workshops, but in the interview, she returned to the conflict between William and Michelle, and spoke insightfully about her self-imposed marginalization and her reluctance to participate in oral or written responses to the stories. The office where the interviews took place had two chairs, side by side, in front of a table on which the tape recorder, participants' writings, and notepad were placed. Another chair resembling a barstool was off to the side. In my notes, I've recorded that Ellen was the 10th of 11 to be interviewed although I remember her hesitating till the last—one of those slippages that romanticize reality. This 170 interview differed from the others since Ellen chose the barstool to perch on, giving her an elevated position. Highlights of our dialogue follow. E: I see William acting the same way that I felt. I was there. I was that person not doing anything anybody told me and I'd get very, very angry. I've been there. My past. I've been in a detention centre for something I did and I thought I'd never get caught, and I got in trouble for it. That's what it brought up for me, because it reminded me of myself at William's age. How old was he? N: He'd be about 18. E: Ya, and that's how I was at 18, so it reminded me. I asked her if she could relate to the brutal treatment that William experienced, and she confirmed a similar pattern. "There was a lot of physical abuse in detention and then I ended up being the abuser." I didn't ask for specific incidents nor did she offer to elaborate; however, it seemed that she had lived with physical violence most of her life until she made a conscious decision to break the cycle. By the time she signed up for the research study, Ellen had made incredible gains. Still, resistance to writing seemed to be an important obstacle to overcome. During the interview, we discussed issues of resistance and control in the classroom that she needed to consciously unlearn in order to progress in her writing. E: I can think and say what I feel, but when I put it down on paper, it's different. It's easier for me to talk about it than write it down. I struggle with that every day. N: I know you can do it E: It takes a lot for my teacher to get me to write anything. N: Are you aware of any power struggle going on? E: I think it's my own power saying, "no, don't write.' And that's why I figure it's my control, and I don't want to do it, so I don't do it. It's really something that's hard for me to let go of the control. N: That's a really good insight. E: It has something to do with the abuse. I can see what I'm doing. N: You can see what you're doing, and then you have to make the decision to change or not. What was your experience as a child? Did you resent the teachers asking you to write? You felt controlled? E: Ya, the control was there. I quit school for that reason, because I didn't like being told what to do. N: Can you see how that has gone full circle? You know, like the abused and the abuser. You felt controlled and now you want to control. E: Ah ha. Defiance Re-Visited I want my voice to narrate my own story, to disrupt erasure, to punctuate the silence so her story re- writes po wer within, feeling equal too. You stare at me, teacher, right through them breakable lens, straight past the story I am, could be, if only... like some inert object, not mo ving Subject 172 seeing your unseen, hearing your unheard. Voices collide against Eat sound. You seek mute, fake images to pass your scrutiny, re-place my centre in your margin. How to touch the world together is my ? * * * * * * * * N: And what's it doing to your learning? E: Nothing, (laughter) It's stubbornness—how I've been all my life. N: But this behaviour must be useful to you for now, or you would say, "Enough. I want to do my writing. I'm not going to let the teacher tell me. It's because I want to.' E: Ya, you got it. Um, I know there is a reason why I am where I am today, because I am doing the same tiling as when I was a kid. If I had homework, I wouldn't do it. N: But, it's good to look at the little kid in you and say, "This didn't get me where I wanted to go. How do I change that now as an adult?' E: That's what I have to do. N: However, moving from "I don't want to be controlled,' how do you take control in a positive way rather than a resistant way? E: I never thought of that, (pause) I need to write. It has been shown in this class that I can write. When I put it down on paper and have someone else look at it, I can do it. N: There's no logic to it. Not writing, I mean. E: No. 173 N: Axe you going to think about this? E: Ya. (laughter) Researcher's Reflection The interview with Ellen raised issues of abuse, control, loss as well as reclaiming voice through storytelling and self-discovery narrative. She profoundly influenced my thinking about a praxis of unlearning in order to re-configure barriers from the past. As Ellen spoke about her resistances to writing, she unknowingly opened a space for me to reflect on my own resistances to writing. This dialogue between researcher and participant finds expression in "Teaching Against the GRAIN" in which Simon (1992) writes: What is to be recognized in a dialogic pedagogy is that both students and teachers are doubly ignorant, not only of their structured resistances but as well of the knowledge of what it is that resists in the other. Given this double structure of ignorance in a pedagogical encounter, each then must listen for the silence in the other, helping each other to knowledge that is inaccessible. This knowledge is not in the teacher; it cannot be given. It is only to be acquired in the conversation between the teacher and students as coinvestigators of each other's resistances, (p. 97) Stories continually reshape themselves as shifting, imperfect images. The voices of self-discovery re-tell of past knowledge and lived experience. As educators, we need to listen with three ears for the inner awakenings that open new pathways to learning. Teachers and students working together as partners become dynamic agents of change. It is important for learners to "look for connections between their personal experience and the theoretical and historical concerns addressed in class" (Berry & Black, p. 88). The acquisition of knowledge requires an active process of social communication with others. Many of the research participants voiced their appreciation for the opportunity to share ideas and learn from their classmates. Learners draw from personal experience to "explore how power works in discourse and practices of daily life and the felt oppressions" (p. 88) which impact on individual interpretations, creating distortions in meaning perspectives. Opening a space for respectful dialogue necessitates balance since voicing and silencing co-exist in both personal and political spheres. Language and the ability to communicate in socially interactive activities are key elements in emancipatory learning. 175 CHAPTER 6: SITE TWO Introduction The main research project began at Site Two in an urban college system during the Fall Semester. As already mentioned, the difference between the pilot project and the other two sites that were part of the main research project consisted of a writing sample and a brainstorming intervention for the purpose of vocabulary building. Site Two conformed to a six-week plan with one visit per week. I spent a total of 11 hours on site that included the initial contact, four 2-hour workshops, and approximately two hours of interviews. Participants worked without a break for the full two hours at which time they proceeded to their next class. This allowed more time for extended brainstorming, small group discussion, and shared learning after the groups had completed the worksheet. During the first session, 12 prospective participants produced a writing sample, filled in a questionnaire, and either signed the letter of consent or took it away for further consideration. At the first meeting, I outlined the timeline and structure of the research study and gave the participants an option of being videotaped or audiotaped during the interview. Initially, the participants expressed a preference for being videotaped. As each group at the four sites had unique situations requiring slight modifications to the research process, I kept the technical aspects of interviewing flexible until closer to the end of the study, but the participants needed an overview of what to expect from day one in the process before making a commitment to participate. 176 As we approached the final workshop at this site, two participants expressed a preference for audiotaping, so on the day of the interviews, I brought a camera, tripod, and tape recorder to the interview sessions that were held in a tiny office next to the Administration offices. Fortunately, I audio-taped the entire session because the process of transcribing audiotaped cassettes on a dictaphone proved to be far easier than manually rewinding dialogues from the videotape in order to catch each word. Yet, the videotaped version provided enriched nuances of meaning through visual communication that one forgets or fails to notice during the interview while focussed on verbal cues and aural messages. In addition, videotaping added a bonus of being able to lip read if my ear, alone, could not discern a second language learner's pronunciation. This latter point is significant since I am profoundly deaf in my left ear and depend a lot on lip reading in my daily communications. For each workshop, I distributed a brainstorming sheet and a worksheet with specific questions to discuss in small groups. The first workshop gave me an opportunity to introduce literary terminology—theme, setting, characters, plot, rising action, conflict, climax, falling action, conclusion—and draw a plot diagram which was familiar to some, but new information for others. I explained the main purpose of brainstorming was not only to take notes to assist them in their written responses, but also to share the flow of ideas that extend as each individual participates. 177 Stories generate ideas, some of which may cause an individual to reflect on an alternate perspective not considered previously. I observed from the brainstorming sessions that culture and lived experience, for example, shaped the initial interpretations of the images and language in a story, but hearing a diversity of views helped to move the learners from static ideas to ideas in flux. This shaping and re-shaping of ideas through the process of brainstorming stimulated group interaction, but more on brainstorming will be discussed in the interviews with individual participants. The worksheet posed questions for analyzing and problem-solving. A question relating to the story's theme was in a separate box at the top of the sheet. Participants filled in their ideas, opinions, predictions, or assumptions in answer to the thematic question. As participants discussed their responses, I recorded key words on a worksheet transparency. Similarly, I used a brainstorming transparency during the half-time discussion to assist the participants in their vocabulary building. After the first reading of a story, I paused the tape to let participants generate words and phrases relating to the text. I gave occasional prompts as open-ended reminders to elicit responses. During this phase, random words and ideas could be read on an overhead projector and copied by the participants. In some cases, root words were expanded on, synonyms, antonyms, or homonyms added, or pronunciation practiced as requested. 178 Overview of the Research Participants Of the original twelve, seven active participants formed a core group. Four participants completed four written responses; one was a non-native Canadian English speaker, two were second language learners, and one was a mixed blood Canadian English speaker. In addition to the four who completed all the workshops, one native Canadian English speaker attended three workshops and submitted three written responses while one second language speaker also attended three workshops and wrote three written responses. One native Canadian speaker who grew up in a Native community and knew some of his first language attended all four workshops but did not submit a responsive journal until the final one for "Safe Home" that everyone completed during the workshop. An eighth person who intended to participate was ill for the first two workshops, came for the third one, then was absent again for the final workshop. Other than a writing sample, she did not submit any writing, but agreed to be interviewed. Two participants at Site Two declined to be interviewed. Despite the fact that some participants came from the "big room" and met for the first time in a smaller classroom for the research study, the group quickly developed a comfort level. People formed new groups as they arrived for each session rather than collecting in the same location. This spontaneous mixing contributed to greater appreciation for cultural perspectives when the groupings changed from week to week. 179 One unfortunate incident occurred when a native participant laughed in what seemed to be a nervous reaction to another native participant's answer, triggering a hurtful flashback in the latter. I have included part of the transcript that elaborates on the incident later in the chapter as a reminder for adult literacy instructors working with residential school survivors and adults with a history of school-related or other trauma that temporary setbacks occur, and some form of mediation/ intervention may facilitate a return to balance and harmony. Although the participant who is a residential school survivor attended only one workshop, she stayed with her group for the entire workshop and felt empowered by the fact that she resisted her first instinct to leave. The instructor gave her immediate support after the workshop and communicated with me by email afterwards. In the interview, the participant deconstructed feelings from the past that were still very much present and alive in body, mind, and spirit, illuminating how internalized messages and experiences can remain dormant a long time; then, return like a boomerang without warning. Site Two participants enjoyed verbalizing, thinking aloud, actively engaging in animated dialogues, so they initiated most of the brainstorming on their own. Of the three main sites, the group at this site transferred vocabulary they recorded on their brainstorming sheets into their written reflections more often than participants at the other sites. In general, there was a greater output of writing per story, notwithstanding the one who submitted only one response and another who did not write at all. The participants in the research study came 180 from different classes, so they had little or no prior knowledge of each other. Although I only worked with one instructor who provided classroom space for the study, there were several literacy instructors working in nearby classrooms and the participants rotated to different instructors, depending on their individualized program. The set-up seemed more like a high school or college atmosphere with opportunities to gain experience from a variety of teaching styles and materials. The instructor with whom I worked did not know all who participated in the study, but she opened her classroom to anyone in the department. She also participated in some of the workshops, wrote a writing sample, listened and asked questions in the first workshop's discussion period, and by her modelling, she helped set a positive tone for the subsequent workshops. I began noting different routines and characteristics of individual instructors and the ways that people in authority convey messages about purpose and place that impact on students and their attitudes toward institutionalized education. Physical Layout The classroom was situated at the end of a long hall and set apart from the "big room" that had large dividers used as book shelves and cupboards. I spent so little time in the larger room that I have only retained vague impressions of open space, computers, tables, and several instructors teaching within close proximity to each other. The research study was held in a spartan room with windows along two sides that offered good natural light although with television, 181 we had to close the blinds. The square room had two blackboards on the enclosed two walls, long tables and chairs, and an instructor's desk. Other than the portable television and VCR equipment that I brought from a technical support wing, the classroom appeared to be a print reading and cursive writing work space. There was no evidence of computers or assistive technology being used. Remembering how furniture seemed to impose division in the Site One classroom layout in terms of proximity to the television and group interaction, I decided to involve participants in small group discussion from day one at this site, and work around furniture rather than become separated by it. Prior to my research, I had not been conscious of how intrusive institutional furnishings can be, however necessary in establishing a certain visual statement for the purpose of the space. The language of furniture situates us in education, but I have learned through experience that human energy, sometimes referred to as "chemistry" has an influence on the group dynamics and can override whatever physical obstacles separate people. Like Site One, the workshops were set a week apart, but rather than being in the afternoon, these sessions were held in the morning from 9:00 a.m. -11:00 a.m. At Site Two, attendance was fairly consistent, partly because each participant was called by the instructor or her assistant the day before my visit. The instructor mentioned in her interview that encouraging participants to attend each week was a major worry for her, personally since "getting the students there, making sure that they would show up which is always a problem 182 with ABE" meant that extra call. I had not asked Lois to call them, but her conscientious effort gave a clear message to the participants that attendance and commitment are important to their education. Researcher /Instructor Relationship A gratifying professional relationship grew between the college's host instructor and myself. After each workshop, Lois emailed me regarding feedback she received from the participants. The check-in proved invaluable if I had concerns about an individual's response; Lois was able to confer with him/her and get back to me. Lois volunteered to share her thoughts after the participants had completed their interviews. Here is a portion of her comments. N: What was the study like for you as a learning experience? L: I was impressed how often the students told me they liked the format where you showed it once, discussed it, did the brainstorming with vocabulary, and then you showed the whole thing again, and I had never thought of that before. I never realized the necessity of that. It just showed me how this group of students, I guess, in particular, needs more time to process information, so I think that's what impressed me the most. Two of the participants at Site Two struggle with short-term memory deficits. Reading a television story twice provided both these individuals the extra reinforcement needed to retain information. However, when asked if they would apply the same strategy to reading a print text twice, the response was negative because just getting from one paragraph to the next caused stress. I 183 would be inclined to negotiate a trial of the strategy with a short article of interest to the student before dismissing the intervention with print text. What seems daunting in the beginning sometimes turns into a helpful tool that neither the instructor nor the student had considered previously, and then you say to yourself, "Why didn't I think of that before?" Another common focus in adult literacy is a print-based orientation. Lois expressed interest in my idea of building bridges for students whose dominant means of acquiring information is either visual observation or active listening, and their enthusiasm for learning seizes up at the sight of a print text. L: And so I think it very difficult for many of the students who are, say, auditory learners or experiential learners, um, and this is something we've talked about in our department from time to time, but historically we've operated in this way, in a print-based way. I mentioned reading circles and conversation circles, and Lois articulated a myth that reading aloud in adult literacy creates embarrassment. Because my style of teaching emphasizes participatory and experiential activities, my approach has been to initiate small group reading activities for those who want to participate and not pre-judge for others what situation best supports their comfort level. Educators are privileged to see small miracles occur daily if they are willing to let go and allow student-centred learning to happen. L: Yes. This is something that I have been in favour of for some time but in ABE there is a feeling that there must not be oral reading because it embarrasses some 184 students. Um, but I agree with you. I would like to see a reading circle or something of that nature because I think it is important for the instructor to actually see how the students are actually reading and also for the students to hear one another read and, perhaps learn some pronunciation and meanings from listening to others talk. N: Emily mentioned that. [She] said that listening to other people's brainstorming helped her not just with her spelling but also the pronunciation of words that perhaps she knew but didn't know how to pronounce. L: Yes. Ya, she mentioned that to me as well. She found the brainstorming extremely useful. My approach to the use of brainstorming techniques was to keep it simple. I introduced brainstorming as a basic concept for sharing ideas and recording vocabulary relating to a particular story. Believing that individuals gradually develop a personal style of brainstorming, I was delighted to find a quote that closely articulates my sentiment in regards to individuality and the Four R's: respect, relationship, responsibility, and reverence. Thornburg (1993) cites Hyerle (1996) as follows: Brainstorming webs should be honored as "sacred" in the sense that the free associations and links among ideas are more like an evolving piece of art than a document to be evaluated using comparative methods. Within this framework of respect for individual thinking, there is no "wrong" use of webbing, only more productive techniques that students can learn for improving their abilities to tap the flow of their creative juices, (p. 90) 185 For me, the key words are "honored," "sacred," "respect," "productive," and "creative." To apply these key words almost guarantees learning. Whether the learning resembles a finished product that satisfies a teacher/researcher is secondary to developing the shape of one's own learning process. One useful skill that the majority of the research participants in adult literacy noted as a missing component of their learning process had been brainstorming. Reflections on Oral and Written Responses Participant: Lauren Lauren is a second language learner who kept to herself more than the others. While she attended three of the four workshops, she arrived late for two workshops, sitting to the side and observing at a distance from the others. Lauren appeared to need space when first entering the classroom. Recently, an educator shared her own reticence to enter some classrooms as a student, describing an almost phobic apprehension that echoed descriptions given by students. Lauren completed the three worksheets and wrote a reflective response for each of the three stories. Since she tended to miss the brainstorming session and just participate in the second half with the second reading and group discussion, I saw no evidence of the vocabulary sheets that other participants included in their notes, but she did include the worksheets. In Lauren's case, she wrote meticulously. Despite the relatively small space for responses to questions on the worksheet, her writing seemed to shrink into corners, leaving ample space for additional information. Typically, her 186 reflective responses started with a position statement and then she would give supporting reasons. Her succinct, expressive writing matched her personal, understated composure. Like art teachers who see the spirit and character in a student's art work, I think writing, too, becomes a whole body process that moves from internal envisioning to external revisioning and reveals much of the writer in the writing. WritCngsSamples The/colorof my weekend/ wouldprobablybe/ the/ color red/. The/ reason/why I pick/ red/ iy because/ it meanfrlove/ to- me/. The/ weekend/that I remember the/ most iy my 1 year annivisary with/ my boyfriend/. That night meant so- Special/to- me/ because/he/had/ surprise/ me/ with/ dinner in Stanley Park/ and a/ present that was unforgettcdyle/. He/had/ SiMpri^e/ me/wUhsa/fmr day cruise/to-1.A. That nighthad/red/color everywhere/not only for wve/ and my boyfriend/, but to-everybody around as-. So thafy my story of my red/ weeks-end. As a quiet, sensitive observer, she and I developed an unspoken understanding that her limited participation in the discussions did not reflect a passivity; rather, her active response flowed through her writing. For example, on her worksheet for "Corrections", she acknowledged conflicting assumptions about the role of police in society, jotting down "racist, crooks, friend, helpful, safety, protection, keep the peace, arrest, brutal". In the section where Lauren considered what it would be like to be William and to imagine how she could change the situation, she writes, "I could change the situation by changing my attitude towards the authority and everyone around. - behave". Her response to the story stands apart from the others because of her identification with William. North/of60 "Corrections' In my opinion/, I thlAxh Michelle/did/the/right thing/by lettingWilliam/go-. The/reason/why I think/ she/ did/the/ right thing/because/ everyone/ deserved/ a/ second/ chance/ On life/, for example/, I waylucky enough/to-deserve/a/second/chance/ because/ of my laywer. If it weren't for my laywer to arrange/ something- with/the/judge/and/the/ prosecuter, I would/ have/ Spent two- months' of my Ufe/in/YVC (youthdetention/center) atthe/ctge/of fourteen. But I waylucky enough to deserve/as second/chance/. I guess-by giving^someone/ sympathy and/ scaring- someone/ enough/ can/ really make/ a/ difference/. It once/ did/ for wie/. Soby letting/ 188 WilUamgo, he/ mightchange/hi&lifa around/and/ gme/ were happy, some/ were/frustrating^ some/ were scary. To- begin with, my 18 month old/ got caught between a/ garcuge/ door and/a/concrete/ wall/. He/was-a/Uttie/bit bruised/but no-broken/boney. That was-the/ scary part of my weekend/. However, all/the/scary feelings-went away when/1 heard/him/say, "mama?' -for the-first time/. It was- the/happiest part of my weekend/; I will/ never forget it! Unfortunately, my Ufe/beccvme/ very frustrating- when/the/ love-of my life/ decicled/ that he/ cx^t make/ up his-mind/about wve/. He/loves me/; he/ loves me/ not. So- Of I was-to- classify my life/ in colors, a/ little/ bit of white/feelings, a/UttLe/bit of black/feelings, Ctwould/be/a/neutral/color, grey. The blending of colours seems in some ways to reflect Mercedes' state of being as she learns to blend into cultural and private spaces that are not always comfortable for her. The colours of fear, relief, delight, and frustration show the significance of emotion as the source of retaining and recalling information. Kenyon and Randall (1997) make an interesting distinction between "talking ourselves inside-out [that] is different from writing ourselves inside-out" Not only is the storyteller not quite the same as the storywriter but neither is the self that is spoken the same as the self that is written" (p. 126). A writer's struggle to transfer orality into literacy authentically has a long history of tension between these interconnected media. Safe/Home/ Thiy iy story remindy me/of how fragile/ children/ are/ to adulty wayy of being/. Ifwe/dont watch/out the/way we/ are/ we/ can mesy them/ up for life/. Ithad/a/Uttle/ meaning/for me/because/1 have/ a/baby and/sorvietOm&yl can/be/quite/strict with/ him/ lyutthvytelly me/to watch/ it! Children need/ a/ safe/place/, people/ who- make/ them/ feel/ love/, that show them(Xrnfidence/throtigh/lifej so-they can grow up and be/ strong- sensible/ people/. About Michelle/, I feel/for her loss-. I know ify hardtoynap out of a/situation/like/that, but Of she/ would/ have/ beenfust a/ little/ bit warmer to Charlie/, they would/have/ complemented/each/other. 3oth/ would/have/had/a/safahome/or situation/. We- people/ should- be/just a little/more/serisiMe/ to- situations around- us, or maybe/ just I because/1 tend/to- go- through/life/just for myself without caring-for others, but its notjust that. Isthatl forget I have/all/1 have/i4vlife/. The/people/that get to- know me/, I mean/ really know me/ (is- not many) say I can/be/quCte/sCnlcaland/I can/be-ltke/a Sponge/; just take/, take/take/ and/ never give/ anything Vn return. Weilthat scares me/because/ if Im really like/that then what will/be/ of vny child later on/. Iyhe/goiMg/tobecome/like/me/? Also, some/ people/ say I'm too stricb. that I should/ eouse/ off a little/. They say that "things" are/ always going- to be-there/, but my baby boy is not always going- tobe/ a baby sol should/enjoy it while/1 can/. Sothi-s story reminds- me/ of that because- my baby is- really good/ too, lihe/Charlie/, but I have/tobe/more/ undestandlng-. To read between the lines of Mercedes7 written response to "Safe Home" requires surrender. Her emotional energy shifts from objective observer to subjective learner in her real world as woman, mother, and friend. Her response 201 to "how fragile children are to adults ways of being" illuminates an "aha" moment when the textual images of Charlie remind Mercedes of her baby's innocence and goodness. As words trace form onto the page, I eavesdrop on the voices of friends as Mercedes absorbs their advice in a good way. Drawing on the textual images of Charlie, she acknowledges a deepening awareness that to care for others, in particular, her baby implies "practical action" (van Manen, p. 129). "[T]hat I forget I have all I have in life" is a (re)membering to change through reflection and action (Freire, 1997). Her insight into the lifeworld of Charlie creates a mirror for re-imagining her relatedness to others. The narrative power of story is that sometimes it can be more compelling, more moving, more physically and emotionally stirring than lived-life itself. Textual emotion, textual understanding can bring an otherwise sober-minded person (the reader but also the author) to tears and to a more deeply understood worldly engagement, (van Manen, p. 129) Mercedes stays open to the information she has gained from the story in order to transfer information into knowledge, van Manen (1990) says that "writing exercises the ability to see" (p. 129) in such a way that: -Although I may try to close my eyes, to ignore what I have seen, in some way my existence is now mediated by my knowledge. And because we are what we can 'see' (know, feel, understand), seeing is already a form of praxis — seeing the significance in a situation places us in the event, makes us part of the event. Writing, true writing, is authoring, the exercise of authority: the power that authors and gives shape to our personal being. Writing exercises us in the sense that it empowers us with embodied knowledge which now can be brought to play or realized into action in the performance of the drama of everyday life. (p. 130) In a sense, the imposition of information enables choice by forcing us to see or ignore; the choice of transferring information into "embodied knowledge" demands a constant re-shaping of our personal being: body, mind, and spirit. * * * * * * * * Agency we (understand in a place of poststructural consent that unfixes meaning empowers us to perform possibilities that might have seemed impossible yesterday or five minutes ago yet now act, reflect> transform the skin of an idea right before our skeptical eyes red, black, yellow, white fixed, inorganic signifiers until experience always elsewhere breaks through absence Presence * * * * * * * * We had an animated discussion about the role of police in society as Mercedes reflected on her lived experiences. I asked her to elaborate on her point of view regarding police brutality. N: You mentioned in your cultural context that [police brutality's] not unusual. M: No, ho, that's not unusual at all. It happens a lot. Right? But I guess I don't think it's that big a deal because I'm used to it? Right? As long as they don't kill nobody, it's okay. N: You think it's behaviour that's acceptable in society. M: Maybe not in this society, but since it has been going on for years and years in [my homeland], it is acceptable there. 203 Similar to Maureen's experience of domestic violence, the violence of public authority figures becomes normalized and legitimized in situations where lack of resistance creates a high tolerance for dehumanization of self and other. Such tolerance for terror disconnects body and spirit. Horsman (1999) cites Agger's (Trans. Bille, 1994, p. 56) interpretation of Foucault, his analysis of discourse and power and policing of the body. Agger writes: Power can use different languages, different techniques, but all are aimed at making the body docile. According to Foucault, in modern industrialized societies, the techniques are aimed at the soul rather than the body, but the goal both of the deliberate and conscious use of violence that occurs under some dictatorships, and the hidden and unconscious use of violence that occurs under more "refined' dictatorships, is the same: a psychological process in which the power relationship is internalized. One weapon in the resistance to these strategies is to expose them. By publicly denouncing the techniques of those in power, the psychological internalization of the power relationship is counteracted. The inner psychic mechanism that allows power to function automatically, so that the oppressed "becomes the principal of his own subjugation/ as Foucault expresses it, is challenged, (pp. 171-2) When Agger says that all forms of power aim toward docility, I interpret these forms to be power over the other that causes dehumanization, whereas power within the self referred to by Freire is, I believe, a form of power that aims to strengthen the body, mind, emotions, and spirit. Resistance to power that violates human dignity in school would be a significant beginning toward changing current attitudes regarding violence in society. N: So, what do police represent in society? 204 M: In society? Ya, I think it's right that they're supposed to be there to keep the order and make people feel safe. Right? But sometimes they're there, and they make you feel unsafe, especially where I'm from. I mean, here it's different in Canada because I think police are really nice here. They're really polite. They do their job. They don't take . . . what's it called when you give them money? N: Bribes. M: Bribes. Actually, it's illegal to that here. Right? N: Yes, it is. Mercedes said she would avoid contact with police at home because she considered it safer to "fix our own problems." Even though the character of Michelle represented a reality that police brutality occurs in Canada, the brutal beating of William into unconsciousness did not phase Mercedes. "I didn't think it was that violent, though." After this comment, she wanted to discuss her response to other stories because the use of video in the classroom had been an enjoyable experience for her. Then, we talked about brainstorming and group discussion as strategies to stimulate written responses to stories. N: I wanted to ask you about the brainstorming technique because what I was using was brainstorming and group discussion to stimulate writing. M: Ya. N: Was that effective for you? M: I think so, I think it was effective because you did it in class. I find it really hard when I have to do it by myself. Brainstorming. But from doing it in class, I got a lot of feedback from other people. Right? And, I did incorporate other people's comments in my paper. Right? N: Oh, that was the point. M: Oh really? Okay, I didn't want to be like a copycat or something. N: No, no. That's interesting that you bring that up. M: Okay. Because some questions were like "What do you think the writer wanted you to think about this story?" and stuff like that. If somebody asked me a question like that, I'm like, "Ah, I don't know." You know it's just really hard to think about. N: And, then, when you heard somebody else's idea, did that stimulate your own? M: Ya, a little bit. N: You get different perspectives. Right? M: Exactly. Different perspectives. More vocabulary. Mercedes expressed a preference for writing during the workshop, as in the final session, rather than afterwards. However, she conceded that spending time reflecting on a story did generate more writing and taught her to be more self-motivated "but I kinda like to forced into something?" By the end of the interview, I realized the stories had stimulated self-discovery narratives that could be life-changing for Mercedes. The time to move on is when the completion of one phase creates a seamless beginning for renewal. 206 Participant: Emily Emily emigrated to Canada approximately 17 years ago. However, she still felt quite hesitant to express herself when I met her. While a new immigrant, she stayed in school for three years, then worked for 12 years before returning to school when employment opportunities disappeared in a changing society. Confined to minimum wage jobs, she enrolled in her college program to upgrade her skills. As a quiet, highly motivated learner, Emily hesitated revealing her knowledge during the brainstorming sessions, but I noticed that she participated fully in small group discussions. Writing- Sample/ Last week/, I had/ a/ blue/ weekend/. I had/cm invitation/togo-to-as wedding/party at 5 p. wis. on/ Saturday; but at the/ last minute/, I had/as call/from/ my neighbour saying/that she/ needed/ a/babysitter •for her 2 year old &onbe