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Abstract of

Sociological, Postmodern, and New Realism Perspectives in Social Constructionism: Implications for Literacy Research

 

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In this article, I attempt an historical definition of social constructionism, a review of its conceptual bases, and an exploration of its epistemological implications. I suggest a history for social constructionism comprised of three paradigmatically distinct waves. The first of these is sociological and empirical in nature, the second, psychological and postmodern, and the third is developmental and tied to what I here term the new realisms. I emphasize that these three formal senses of social constructionism need to be distinguished from both psychological theories of social constructivism, and from looser, colloquial senses of social construction employed in current literacy research. I then modestly speculate on how each of these formal social constructionisms could inspire future directions in literacy education research.

Abstract from Hruby, G.G. (2001). Sociological, Postmodern, and New Realism Perspectives in Social Constructionism: Implications for Literacy Research. Reading Research Quarterly, 36(1), 48–62. doi: 10.1598/RRQ.36.1.3

 

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