Landscapes Of Literacy
Abstract
Thirteen marginal Philippine communities were examined in an
ethnographic study of the meaning of functional literacy and whether literacy
invariably promotes development. The 13 sites were purposely selected to
provide a broad sampling from three standpoints: (1) major-livelihood and
form of economic activity (farming, fishing, urban poor, disaster areas); (2)
ethnolinguistic grouping (Luzon, Visayas, Mindanao); and (3) lifestyle or
rhythm of life in the community (traditional, transitional, Moslem Filipino
minority, lowland Christian majority, urban poor, developmental). The sample
functional literacy rate in the study's communities ranged from 34.4% to
79.8%. Special attention was paid to the following topics: community life as
a context of literacy practice; community knowledge and the passage to a
literate tradition; different practices, meanings, and definitions of
functional literacy in different contents; constraints in the relationship
between literacy and development; and possibilities for literacy in
conceptualizing a school of the people. The study demonstrated that the
concepts of literacy and numeracy cannot be separated from their social and
cultural settings and that standard measures of literacy used in
industrialized countries are often inappropriate in other nations. (Eleven
tables/figures are included. The report contains 41 references. Appended is
information about the quantitative method and data analysis.) (MN)
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