Drawing on interviews with 15 boys attending schools in low socioeconomic communities in Australia, this paper examines the multiplicity of contextual influences on boys’ everyday reading experiences. Implementing an ecological metaphor, boys’ narratives about (i) their attitudes towards reading at school (microsystem); (ii) parental beliefs about reading (mesosystem); (iii) masculinities within low socioeconomic communities (exosystem), and; (iv) reading as socially valued knowledge (macrosystem) are explored. The paper illustrates the textured nature of immediate and broader influences on boys’ engagement with, and positioning of, reading. In particular, the paper challenges dominant discourses about working-class boys’ reading practices,...
International comparisons of boys’ performance—and underachievement—in reading is often framed as a ...
The homogenizing and binary categorization of boys and girls in popular and political rhetoric conti...
A seminal body of work emerged in the 1980s recognising reading as a site for gender and class ident...
Drawing on interviews with 15 boys attending schools in low socioeconomic communities in Australia, ...
Drawing on interviews with 15 boys attending schools in low socioeconomic communities in Australia, ...
This article draws on interview data gathered from a broader study concerned with examining issues a...
This article disrupts dominant discourses around boys and reading that often homogenise young males ...
This article disrupts dominant discourses around boys and reading that often homogenise young males ...
Drawing on findings from a recent doctoral study, this paper examines differences amongst groups of ...
Boys, Masculinities and Reading explores elementary students’ interpretations of their experiences o...
This paper examines the influence of dominant discourses of masculinity on the apparent systematic u...
Drawing on findings from a recent doctoral study, this paper examines differences amongst groups of ...
In this article we describe the leisure reading practices and attitudes towards reading of two cohor...
Boys, Masculinities and Reading explores elementary students' interpretations of their experiences o...
A seminal body of work emerged in the 1980s recognising reading as a site for gender and class ident...
International comparisons of boys’ performance—and underachievement—in reading is often framed as a ...
The homogenizing and binary categorization of boys and girls in popular and political rhetoric conti...
A seminal body of work emerged in the 1980s recognising reading as a site for gender and class ident...
Drawing on interviews with 15 boys attending schools in low socioeconomic communities in Australia, ...
Drawing on interviews with 15 boys attending schools in low socioeconomic communities in Australia, ...
This article draws on interview data gathered from a broader study concerned with examining issues a...
This article disrupts dominant discourses around boys and reading that often homogenise young males ...
This article disrupts dominant discourses around boys and reading that often homogenise young males ...
Drawing on findings from a recent doctoral study, this paper examines differences amongst groups of ...
Boys, Masculinities and Reading explores elementary students’ interpretations of their experiences o...
This paper examines the influence of dominant discourses of masculinity on the apparent systematic u...
Drawing on findings from a recent doctoral study, this paper examines differences amongst groups of ...
In this article we describe the leisure reading practices and attitudes towards reading of two cohor...
Boys, Masculinities and Reading explores elementary students' interpretations of their experiences o...
A seminal body of work emerged in the 1980s recognising reading as a site for gender and class ident...
International comparisons of boys’ performance—and underachievement—in reading is often framed as a ...
The homogenizing and binary categorization of boys and girls in popular and political rhetoric conti...
A seminal body of work emerged in the 1980s recognising reading as a site for gender and class ident...