|
|
Books > Language & Literature > Language & linguistics > Literacy
This collection offers an inclusive, multifaceted look at
individual students' patterns of writing trajectories, as well as
their development of an identity as a writer. Building on rare
longitudinal research, this translated text explores how
adolescents learn subjects through writing and learn writing
through subjects. Contributors consider issues relating to
different forms of writing and grapple with students' ambivalence
or resistance to this at school, together offering an examination
of how the education system can rise to the challenge of offering
today's students meaningful and appropriate writing instruction.
Bringing knowledge from writing researchers and educational
researchers together, Understanding Young People's Writing
Development explores: Young adults' complicated experiences with
the school writing project Practices, purposes, and identification
in student note writing Knowledge construction in writing as
experience and educational aim The pedagogical challenges and
perspectives of writing and writer development Creativity as
experience and potential in writing development The impact of
digital technologies and media on student writing Using students'
work to aid the understanding of practice, this book will help
highlight the importance of viewing individual writer developments
from a social, institutional, and societal context, and raise
questions that will advance writing pedagogy and the teaching and
learning of school subjects.
Income disparity for students in both K-12 and higher education
settings has become increasingly apparent since the onset of the
COVID-19 pandemic. In the wake of these changes, impoverished
students face a variety of challenges both internal and external.
Educators must deepen their awareness of the obstacles students
face beyond the classroom to support learning. Traditional literacy
education must evolve to become culturally, linguistically, and
socially relevant to bridge the gap between poverty and academic
literacy opportunities. Poverty Impacts on Literacy Education
develops a conceptual framework and pedagogical support for
literacy education practices related to students in poverty. The
research provides protocols supporting student success through
explored connections between income disparity and literacy
instruction. Covering topics such as food insecurity, integrated
instruction, and the poverty narrative, this is an essential
resource for administration in both K-12 and higher education
settings, professors and teachers in literacy, curriculum
directors, researchers, instructional facilitators, pre-service
teachers, school counselors, teacher preparation programs, and
students.
Drawing together Smagorinsky's extensive research over a 20-year
period, Learning to Teach English and the Language Arts explores
how beginning teachers' pedagogical concepts are shaped by a
variety of influences. Challenging popular thinking about the
binary roles of teacher education programs and school-based
experiences in the process of learning to teach, Smagorinsky
illustrates, through case studies in the disciplines of English and
the Language Arts, that teacher education programs and
classroom/school contexts are not discrete contexts for learning
about teaching, nor are each of these contexts unified in the
messages they offer about teaching. He explores the tensions, not
only between these contexts and others, but within them to
illustrate the social, cultural, contextual, political and
historical complexity of learning to teach. Smagorinsky revisits
familiar theoretical understandings, including Vygotsky's concept
development and Lortie's apprenticeship of observation, to consider
their implications for teachers today and to examine what teacher
candidates learn during their teacher education experiences and how
that learning shapes their development as teachers.
|
|