Teaching U.S.-Educated Multilingual Writers: Pedagogical Practices from and for the Classroom
This volume was born to address the lack of classroom-oriented scholarship regarding U.S.-educated multilingual writers. Unlike prior volumes about U.S.-educated multilinguals, this book focuses solely on pedagogy--from classroom activities and writing assignments to course curricula and pedagogical support programs outside the immediate classroom. Unlike many pedagogical volumes that are written in the voice of an expert researcher-theorist, this volume is based on the notion of teachers sharing practices with teachers
 
All of the contributors are teachers who are writing about and reflecting on their own experiences and outcomes and interweaving those experiences and outcomes with current theory and research in the field. The volume thus portrays teachers as active, reflective participants engaged in critical inquiry. Contributors represent community college, college, and university contexts; academic ESL, developmental writing, and first-year composition classes; and face-to-face, hybrid, and online contexts.
 
This book was developed primarily to meet the needs of practicing writing teachers in college-level ESL, basic writing, and college composition classrooms, but will also be useful to pre-service teachers in TESOL, Composition, and Education graduate programs.  
"1121504493"
Teaching U.S.-Educated Multilingual Writers: Pedagogical Practices from and for the Classroom
This volume was born to address the lack of classroom-oriented scholarship regarding U.S.-educated multilingual writers. Unlike prior volumes about U.S.-educated multilinguals, this book focuses solely on pedagogy--from classroom activities and writing assignments to course curricula and pedagogical support programs outside the immediate classroom. Unlike many pedagogical volumes that are written in the voice of an expert researcher-theorist, this volume is based on the notion of teachers sharing practices with teachers
 
All of the contributors are teachers who are writing about and reflecting on their own experiences and outcomes and interweaving those experiences and outcomes with current theory and research in the field. The volume thus portrays teachers as active, reflective participants engaged in critical inquiry. Contributors represent community college, college, and university contexts; academic ESL, developmental writing, and first-year composition classes; and face-to-face, hybrid, and online contexts.
 
This book was developed primarily to meet the needs of practicing writing teachers in college-level ESL, basic writing, and college composition classrooms, but will also be useful to pre-service teachers in TESOL, Composition, and Education graduate programs.  
27.49 In Stock
Teaching U.S.-Educated Multilingual Writers: Pedagogical Practices from and for the Classroom

Teaching U.S.-Educated Multilingual Writers: Pedagogical Practices from and for the Classroom

Teaching U.S.-Educated Multilingual Writers: Pedagogical Practices from and for the Classroom

Teaching U.S.-Educated Multilingual Writers: Pedagogical Practices from and for the Classroom

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Overview

This volume was born to address the lack of classroom-oriented scholarship regarding U.S.-educated multilingual writers. Unlike prior volumes about U.S.-educated multilinguals, this book focuses solely on pedagogy--from classroom activities and writing assignments to course curricula and pedagogical support programs outside the immediate classroom. Unlike many pedagogical volumes that are written in the voice of an expert researcher-theorist, this volume is based on the notion of teachers sharing practices with teachers
 
All of the contributors are teachers who are writing about and reflecting on their own experiences and outcomes and interweaving those experiences and outcomes with current theory and research in the field. The volume thus portrays teachers as active, reflective participants engaged in critical inquiry. Contributors represent community college, college, and university contexts; academic ESL, developmental writing, and first-year composition classes; and face-to-face, hybrid, and online contexts.
 
This book was developed primarily to meet the needs of practicing writing teachers in college-level ESL, basic writing, and college composition classrooms, but will also be useful to pre-service teachers in TESOL, Composition, and Education graduate programs.  

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780472122103
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publication date: 08/25/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 344
File size: 2 MB

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction Part 1: Pedagogical Approaches Chapter 1: Inclusivity Through Community: Designing Response Systems for “Mixed” Academic Writing Courses / Dana R. Ferris, University of California, Davis Chapter 2: Increasing Student Metacognition and Transfer Through Reflective Writing / Gita DasBender, Seton Hall University (New Jersey) Chapter 3: Genre Play: Moving Students from Formulaic to Complex Academic Writing / Sunny Hyon, California State University, San Bernardino Chapter 4: Using Systemic-Functional Linguistic Analysis to Explain Expectations of Academic Discourse / Luciana C. de Oliveira, University of Miami (Florida) Chapter 5: Students as “Language Detectives”: Teaching Lexico-Grammatical Features of Academic Language / Megan Siczek, George Washington University (DC) and Gena Bennett, Independent Scholar, Kailua, Hawaii Chapter 6: Screencasting: Incorporating Personalized Video Feedback in Hybrid Writing Classes / Anna Grigoryan, Pepperdine University (California) Chapter 7: Digital Storytelling: Developing Academic Writing Skills Through Multimodal Texts / Joel Bloch, Independent Scholar, Columbus, Ohio Chapter 8: In Their Own Voices: Validating Multilingual Identities Through Student Literacy Narratives / Vanessa Cozza, Washington State University, Tri-Cities Part 2: Curricular Approaches Chapter 9: “Seeing and Writing the World”: Exploring Personal Experience and Cultural Knowledge Through Academic Writing / Kristi Costello, Arkansas State University and Paul Shovlin, Binghamton University, SUNY Chapter 10: Critical Reading, Rhetorical Analysis, and Source-Based Writing / Joanne Baird Giordano, University of Wisconsin–Marathon County and Holly Hassel, University of Wisconsin–Marathon County Chapter 11: World Englishes: Academic Explorations of Language, Culture, and Identity / Shawna Shapiro, Middlebury College (Vermont) Chapter 12: “Active Editing” Workshops in the Writing Center: Modeling and Practicing Hands-On Strategies for Addressing Sentence-Level Concerns / Kristiane M. Ridgway, College of San Mateo (California) Chapter 13: Learning from Each Other: Pairing Pre-Service Teachers with U.S.-Educated Multilingual Writers / Cathryn Crosby, University of Delaware and Debbie Lamb Ousey, Penn State Brandywine and Myra M. Goldschmidt, Penn State Brandywine Index
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