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Dive into the research topics where Amy Stornaiuolo is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy Stornaiuolo.


Curriculum Inquiry | 2014

Cosmopolitan Literacies, Social Networks, and "Proper Distance": Striving to Understand in a Global World.

Glynda Hull; Amy Stornaiuolo

Abstract How are identities as cosmopolitan citizens realized in practice, and how can dialogue be fostered across differences in culture, language, ideology, and geography? More particularly, how might young people be positioned to develop effective and ethical responses, in our digital age, to local and global concerns? Such are the questions we addressed in a design‐based research project that linked young people around the world via a private social network. In effect, we studied cosmopolitanism “on the ground,” as youth on the cusp of adulthood came to think and act reflexively about the opportunities, responsibilities, and challenges of intercultural, cross‐geographic communication in a global, digital world. To analyze the conversations and creative artifacts exchanged by groups of youth in New York City and in India, we invoked the cosmopolitan construct of “proper distance,” asking how participants gauged their relationship to their readers. We identified three stances that composers adopted in their efforts to communicate with and understand their audiences—proximal, reflexive, and reciprocal—and we demonstrated how such stances were manifested semiotically and relationally. This study contributes to a growing literature on the relationship of globalization to education and on cosmopolitanism as one response to this confluence. It demonstrates in empirical, interactional detail the complexity and challenge of learning to communicate, create, and understand across difference, as well as the potential of youth to engage those complexities ethically and to work at comprehending their subtleties. It further illuminates the centrality, for our youthful participants and their cosmopolitan project, of being able to compose in multiple and conjoined modes, and it reanimates the rhetorical construct of “audience” for digital and global times.


Harvard Educational Review | 2016

Restorying the Self: Bending Toward Textual Justice

Ebony Elizabeth Thomas; Amy Stornaiuolo

In this essay, Ebony Elizabeth Thomas and Amy Stornaiuolo explore new trends in reader response for a digital age, particularly the phenomenon of bending texts using social media. They argue that bending is one form of restorying, a process by which people reshape narratives to represent a diversity of perspectives and experiences that are often missing or silenced in mainstream texts, media, and popular discourse. Building on Louise Rosenblatts influential transactional theory of reading, the authors theorize restorying as a participatory textual practice in which young people use new media tools to inscribe themselves into existence. The authors build on theorists from Mikhail Bakthin to Noliwe Rooks in order to illustrate tensions between individualistic “ideological becoming” and critical reader response as a means of protest. After discussing six forms of restorying, they focus on bending as one way youth make manifest their embodied, lived realities and identities, providing examples from sites of ...


Journal of Literacy Research | 2017

Developing a Transliteracies Framework for a Connected World

Amy Stornaiuolo; Anna Smith; Nathan Phillips

This article introduces a transliteracies framework to conceptually account for the contingency and instability of literacy practices on the move and to offer a set of methodological tools for investigating these mobilities. Taking the paradox of mobility—the simultaneous restricting or regulation of movement that accompanies mobility—as its central dialectic, a transliteracies framework functions as a flexible heuristic for attending to how meaning making and power are intertwined in and distributed across social and material relationships. We argue that a transliteracies framework encompasses two primary dimensions of mobile literacy practices: (a) the everyday activity of creating, maintaining, and disassembling associations across movements of people and things (indicated by the prefix trans-) and (b) the dynamic and material nature of meaning making in activity (indicated by the plural root word literacies). To trace the emergent and consequential ways mobilities are managed within and across systems, we introduce four analytical tools for inquiry: emergence, uptake, resonance, and scale. These inquiry tools address the paradox of mobility by highlighting the systemic dimensions of practice that create and perpetuate inequities. We argue that these transliteracies tools facilitate an inquiry stance that positions researchers to attend to people’s emic meaning-making processes, work to balance multiple perspectives, account for privilege and position, question normative assumptions and beliefs, and engage in and value multiple ways of knowing.


Review of Research in Education | 2017

Disrupting Educational Inequalities through Youth Digital Activism.

Amy Stornaiuolo; Ebony Elizabeth Thomas

This article reviews scholarship on youth and young adult activism in digital spaces, as young users of participatory media sites are engaging in political, civic, social, or cultural action and advocacy online to create social change. The authors argue that youth’s digital activism serves as a central mechanism to disrupt inequality, and that education research should focus on these youth practices, particularly by young people from marginalized communities or identities, in order to provide important counter-narratives to predominant stories circulating about “at-risk”or disaffected youth. The article examines young people’s use of online tools for organizing toward social change across three lines of inquiry—young people’s cultural and political uses of participatory tools and spaces online, new forms of youth civic engagement and activism, and adult-supported programs and spaces facilitating youth activism. In centering the review on youth digital activism, the authors suggest that education researchers can learn from youth themselves about how to disrupt educational inequalities, resulting in a more humanizing stance for education research that takes into fuller account the human potential of all youth, beyond school walls.


Theory Into Practice | 2018

Multiplicities in Motion: A Turn to Transliteracies.

Anna Smith; Amy Stornaiuolo; Nathan Phillips

ABSTRACT In an effort to draw attention to the mobile dimensions of meaning making, this article proposes a pedagogy of transliteracies, supporting educators and learners in critically reflecting on how people, media, and things are connected across space and time. Expanding on the New London Group’s (1996) multiliteracies vision of communicative and ideological multiplicities, we articulate the importance of moving from multi- to trans- to highlight the mobile and emergent aspects of meaning making. We work through a classroom example to consider the contours of literacies and learning practices for making meaning on the move. We argue that in a mobile and digitally networked world, a pedagogy of transliteracies draws much needed attention to people and things connecting, relating, and intersecting, and also to how these connections, relations, and intersections occur in unequal ways that support some learners and disenfranchise others.


English in Education | 2010

Cultural Citizenship and Cosmopolitan Practice: Global Youth Communicate Online.

Glynda Hull; Amy Stornaiuolo; Urvashi Sahni


Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy | 2010

Literate Arts in a Global World: Reframing Social Networking as Cosmopolitan Practice

Glynda Hull; Amy Stornaiuolo


Language arts | 2009

Mobile Texts and Migrant Audiences: Rethinking Literacy and Assessment in a New Media Age

Amy Stornaiuolo; Glynda Hull; Mark Evan Nelson


Archive | 2013

Imagined Readers and Hospitable Texts: Global Youths Connect Online

Glynda Hull; Amy Stornaiuolo; Laura Sterponi


Teaching and Teacher Education | 2016

Teaching in global collaborations: Navigating challenging conversations through cosmopolitan activity

Amy Stornaiuolo

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Glynda Hull

University of California

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Anna Smith

Illinois State University

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Nathan Phillips

University of Illinois at Chicago

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