Students are affected by their social background, ethnic, geographic and
cultural origin, languages spoken, gender, sexuality, religion, etc.
Also affecting students are the more general social-political
transformations (globalization, migration, changing labor markets, etc.)
Whereas a lot of the social science literature in education has viewed
these aspects of student identity and diversity as separate from
each other, I aim to understand how these factors impact on student
identities-work intersectionally, especially in English Language
Arts (ELA) classrooms. In the referenced pilot study, I use Positioning
Theory to analyze the discursive incidents around literacy learning in
Texas. By analyzing students’ interactions, I begin to gain an
understanding of student agentic movements and the marginalizing forces
that strengthen or diminish a student’s response to learning.