The need for a more critical approach to English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teaching and learning is undeniable, yet little has been done to prepare teachers for teaching with this approach. This article reports one of the cycles on my action research study, involving a teacher educator and 35 pre-service English teachers. Together with the teacher educator, a unit on critical literacy was developed using fairy tales as the core text. In the unit, we introduced pre-service teachers to critical literacy through the critical reading, analysis, and rewriting of fairy tales for social transformation. They were assigned to rewrite a fairy tale as a form of social action and to reflect on the choices made in the rewriting process. The re-written fairy tales and the accompanying reflection essay were analysed using a rubric adapted from the four dimensions of critical literacy (Lewison et al., 2002). The re-written fairy tales and the reflections suggest the pre-service teachers’ growing understanding of the non-neutrality of text, ability to read from a different perspective and offer an alternative one, and ability to identify socio-political issues, such as stereotypes, and to subvert them.
History
Publication title
Journal of Literary Education
Volume
4
Issue
4
Pagination
131-150
ISSN
2659-3149
Department/School
Office of the School of Social Sciences
Publisher
Universidad de Valencia * Departamento de Didactica de la Lengua y la Literatura
Publication status
Published online
Place of publication
Spain
Rights statement
Copyright 2021 the author. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License