School of Education, Room 104
University of Colorado Boulder
249 UCB
Boulder, CO 80309
William McGinley is Associate Professor of Literacy Studies. His teaching areas of interest include language and literacy across the curriculum; teaching literature in secondary school; and literacy in families, schools, and communities. Research areas of interest include literature and the humanities in public education; literacy and culture; book clubs and popular reading; community-based literacy practices; teacher education and community mentorships.
In 2006, he wrote and co–directedÌýLegends and Love, a dramatic poem that was performed by several high school students at the Paramount Theater in Denver. Recent papers and published works includeÌýNovel Ideas: Literacy Imagination and Literacy Research, Amazing Space: Reading Life in the Literature Classroom,ÌýLiterature and theÌýLife of our Classrooms: Transforming our Â鶹ÒùÔº/Transforming OurselvesÌý(with George Kamberelis),ÌýLiterary Retailing and the Re-making of Popular ReadingÌý(with Katanna Conley),Ìý"We've Been Through it:" The Pedagogy of Adult Community Members in an Urban After School Program, andÌýPedagogy for a Few: The Modern Book Industry as Literature Teacher. His work has appeared in a wide range of nationally recognized and regional journals. He is currently working on a book-length play based on his experiences as founder and director of Literacy and Learning for Life, an innovative after school literacy program in a Denver community center. He has received university and professional awards for his research and his programs involving community outreach and service. He is the founder and editor ofÌýSpoken, an on-line performance poetry journal for high school students in the Denver metropolitan and Boulder Valley areas. In addition, he currently runs several literacy–based outreach and professional development programs in local high schools and elementary schools.Ìý
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Education
PhD English Education, University of Illinois, 1989
MA Literacy Education, Idaho State University, 1983
BA English Creative Writing, Western Kentucky University, 1976