GuLL: Guerrilla Literacy Learners
Programme: Erasmus +
Key Action: Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices
Action Type: Strategic Partnerships addressing more than one field
Project Number: 2014-1-BE02-KA200-000472
Duration: 01/09/2014 - 31/10/2016 (2 years)
Coordinated by: UC Limburg (Belgium)
Project website: https://pleasemakemistakes.eu/ (not operational)
Facebook Page: @gulllearners
Facebook Group: @GuLL - educators - umbrella
GuLL MOOC: Guerrilla Literacy Learners Online Course
EU Projects Database: GuLL
Partners
UC Limburg (Belgium) - coordinator
Associazione di Promozione Sociale Asinitas Onlus (Italy)
Colegiul Economic Ion Ghica (Romania)
MTÜ Kating Noored (Estonia)
36,6 Competence Centre (Poland)
NETRA Kereskedelmi es Tanácsadó Betéti Társaság (Hungary)
Storybag (Netherlands)
The Gilfillan Partnership Ltd (United Kingdom)
Universita degli Studi della Tuscia (Italy)
Univerzita Palackeho v Olomouci (Czechia)
Project description
This project develops a “Guerrilla” Flipped Class, on the model of “guerrilla gardening/knitting movement” intending to improve public spaces through citizens’ creative contribution. The target audiences are individual learners, teachers, community-builders, librarians, and teacher training departments seeking learner-centered ways to improve basic literacy thus decreasing the number of early school leavers. The end products are a teachers manual for this new approach - including an analysis of students’ needs and the monitoring of individual language acquisition processes - and learners’ tutorials, in which learners link their error patterns (the “guerilla”) to the correct ways of language use. Based on connectivist pedagogical approaches, this remedial work is linked to both formal and informal learning environments (from libraries to community schools to digital spaces) and to multilingual acquisition.
Basic literacy levels are problematic throughout Europe in the twenty-first century, resulting in an ever increasing group of citizens that drop out of school prematurely and risk becoming marginalised, unemployed and impoverished. However, it is our working hypothesis that these drop-outs can teach us new ways of acquiring literacy.
This new approach is based on a pilot project at the Catholic University College Limburg (CLUC) that explored how students can become proficient writers through creating video clips in which they show which guerilla tactics they use (make mistakes) and how they remediate them. In these tutorials, students discussed the guerilla patterns which emerged through thinking aloud exercises. At CLUC, we have termed this process guerrilla literacy, since the students guessed, mixed rules unorthodoxically, applied rules in the wrong contexts, and applied mathematical logics to solve linguistic challenges. We observed that once students could link their errors to a guerrilla pattern, it was easier for them to correct the mistake.
In the proposed project, we will develop a guerrilla methodology through: testing, mind-mapping, digital thinking aloud exercises, describing emerging guerrilla patterns, creating knowledge clips and sharing them in a MOOC. Next, we ask students to link their error patterns to structures in other languages. The rationale behind this is that most people do not speak standard languages. They speak regional alternatives or another (European) language or an idiolectal L2. Again it is our working hypothesis that if we allow learners to compare two or more linguistic systems and focus on the differences, their basic literacies will improve.
Furthermore, in our CLUC pilot project we realized we had to “unlock” learners with literacy difficulties through narratives. In these narratives they could make sense of and find recognition for the feelings of shame about their inability to learn their mother-tongue and for the pain they have suffered due to a chain of negative feedback over the years. In our proposed method these narratives of shame and pain are replaced by stories of pride, resilience and out-of-the box thinking. As such we use narratives to help create a positive identity.
Objectives
Develop Guerrilla Flipped Classroom Methodology: To create an innovative, learner-centered approach that enhances basic literacy by encouraging students to identify and correct their own language errors using creative and unconventional methods, inspired by the “guerrilla” metaphor.
Empower Learners through Error Recognition: To help learners recognize error patterns in their language use (“guerrilla tactics”) and develop the ability to self-correct by linking these errors to correct linguistic structures.
Support Multilingual Literacy Development: To encourage learners to compare multiple linguistic systems (regional dialects, alternative languages, idiolectal L2s), promoting cross-linguistic awareness as a tool for improving literacy.
Use Digital and Connectivist Pedagogical Tools: To incorporate digital exercises such as thinking aloud, mind-mapping, and knowledge clips to create an interactive and remedial learning environment that links formal and informal settings like libraries, community schools, and digital spaces.
Produce Educational Resources: To create a teachers’ manual and learners’ tutorials, documenting the guerrilla literacy method and providing practical tools for improving language acquisition and literacy.
Promote Positive Identity and Resilience: To replace feelings of shame and failure among learners with narratives of pride, resilience, and creativity by using storytelling to shift the focus from past struggles to positive learning outcomes.
Reduce Early School Leavers: To combat the high rates of early school dropouts across Europe by offering an engaging and non-traditional approach to literacy, which can support learners at risk of marginalization, unemployment, and poverty.
Target group
Individual Learners with Literacy Difficulties: Learners who struggle with basic literacy skills and are at risk of leaving school prematurely, especially those who have faced a chain of negative feedback in traditional learning settings.
Teachers and Educators: Teachers seeking innovative, student-centered methodologies for improving literacy in diverse educational environments.
Community Builders and Librarians: Individuals working in public spaces and learning environments, such as community schools and libraries, who are interested in fostering creative, learner-centered literacy projects.
Teacher Training Departments: Institutions that provide teacher training and are looking to integrate new, connectivist approaches to literacy education into their programs.
Results
This manual includes an analysis of students’ needs and the monitoring of individual language acquisition processes as well as learners’ tutorials, in which they link their
error patterns (the “guerilla”) to
the correct ways of language use.
In this MOOC teachers learn how to utilise user-centred design, social media, knowledge clips, narrative coaching, graphic facilitation, learning diaries, peer-assessment, as well as detect and work with their students’ Guerrilla patterns.
For more information on project results and download links go to the EU projects database here.
Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.