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Writing and Learning in Cross-national Perspective - Transitions From Secondary To Higher Education (Paperback)
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Writing and Learning in Cross-national Perspective - Transitions From Secondary To Higher Education (Paperback)
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Despite the increasingly global implications of conversations about
writing and learning, U.S. composition studies has devoted little
attention to cross-national perspectives on student writing and its
roles in wider cultural contexts. Caught up in our own concerns
about how U.S. students make the transition as writers from
secondary school to postsecondary education, we often overlook the
fact that students around the world are undergoing the same
evolution. How do the students in China, England, France, Germany,
Kenya, or South Africa--the educational systems represented in this
collection--write their way into the communities of their chosen
disciplines? How, for instance, do students whose mother tongue is
not the language of instruction cope with the demands of academic
and discipline-specific writing? And in what ways is U.S. students'
development as academic writers similar to or different from that
of students in other countries?
With this collection, editors David Foster and David R. Russell
broaden the discussion about the role of writing in various
educational systems and cultures. Students' development as academic
writers raises issues of student authorship and agency, as well as
larger issues of educational access, institutional power relations,
system goals, and students' roles in society. The contributors to
this collection discuss selected writing purposes and forms
characteristic of a specific national education system, describe
students' agency as writers, and identify contextual
factors--social, economic, linguistic, cultural--that shape
institutional responses to writing development.
In discussions that bookend these studies of different educational
structures, the editors compare U.S. postsecondary writing
practices and pedagogies with those in other national systems, and
suggest new perspectives for cross-national study of
learning/writing issues important to all educational systems. Given
the worldwide increase in students entering higher education and
the endless need for effective writing across disciplines and
nations, the insights offered here and the call for further studies
are especially welcome and timely.
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