1 / 21

Sue Nichols, Helen Nixon & Sophia Rainbird University of South Australia, Australia

Mercantile parenting: the circulation of information about children’s literacy and development in commercial spaces. Sue Nichols, Helen Nixon & Sophia Rainbird University of South Australia, Australia Jennifer Rowsell, Graduate School of Education, Rutgers University, USA

Download Presentation

Sue Nichols, Helen Nixon & Sophia Rainbird University of South Australia, Australia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mercantile parenting: the circulation of information about children’s literacy and development in commercial spaces Sue Nichols, Helen Nixon & Sophia Rainbird University of South Australia, Australia Jennifer Rowsell, Graduate School of Education, Rutgers University, USA Funded by ARC Discovery Grant 2007-2009 Rutgers University Development Grant

  2. Our Questions • How are resources for early learning produced for and circulated among parents? • How are resources spatially located and networked in community, government and commercial spaces? • What messages do these resources and practices send? • The interactions between all these elements.

  3. Project Elements • Ethnographic approach (Bloome and Green, 1998) • Geosemiotics (Scollon & Scollon, 2003) • Network theory (Law, 1999, 2003) • Three sites: 1) small rural community outside of Adelaide, SA 2) larger outer suburb of Adelaide, SA 3) suburban, university town in Princeton, NJ

  4. Research Design • Parent survey • Interviews with parents and service providers • Observation • Resource inventory & mapping (Neuman & Celano, 2001) • Artefact collection • Web-site investigation • Observation • Opportunistic information gathering

  5. Data analysis: geographic, social and virtual affordances • Spatial context – where is this text/display/shop? What kind of space is this? How easy is it to find/reach/see? • Cost – how much time/money/effort does it take to: get to this place/access this resource/take this thing home? • Social relations – which people are hailed to read this text/come to this place and which people do? • Mobility – how do information resources move in and out of this space? • Networking – what kinds of connections are made between information resources in different spaces and across material and virtual spaces?

  6. Gumtree Plaza, a Westfield mall in NE Adelaide,viewed from library and local council offices- a late 1960s planned separation of civic and commercial suburban spaces.

  7. The WFamily Westfield New Jersey USA

  8. Mum’s TipsKids and Computers I let my kids use the computer to access some very good web sites, such as 'ABC Kids', 'Happy meal', and some colouring website..., even 7,9,10 news. I create links that they can easily get on. Shu-Fen(Mum of 2)

  9. Inside the ABC shop Gumtree Plaza Books, spin-off merchandise from ABC and BBC TV shows, and Reading Eggs literacy materials displayed

  10. What is ABC Reading Eggs? ABC Reading Eggs is a highly innovative program based on the latest research, designed to make learning to read easy and fun by combining books with online reading games and activities. And it works! We’ve had great feedback from thousands of satisfied parents whose children are learning to read. Children love the games, songs, golden eggs and other rewards which, along with reading success, really motivates children to keep learning.

  11. Online ‘ABC branded stores’ for themed merchandise ‘Reggie’ animated welcome Tally of Games Bought – formerly ‘Lessons Completed’ View of RE world with animated avatars

  12. Kmart is located alongside an open-style café where parents can sit and observe their children playing in Playworld, a feature common to Westfield malls worldwide.

  13. ABC books, DVDs & themed clothes in Kmart

More Related