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Today more and more ethnically, culturally, and linguistically
diverse students enroll in our college and university courses.
These diverse, multilingual students enrich our campuses and at the
same time present challenges. Who are these students? What skills
do these diverse students need to be successful in college? How can
faculty help them succeed? For faculty in all disciplines seeking
answers to these questions, this is an essential book. This text
provides practical advice on how to assist these students with
academic tasks and how to help them to succeed in the academy.
This book explicitly addresses ethical dilemmas and issues that
post-secondary ESL faculty commonly encounter and examines them in
the framework of social justice concerns. Ethics is defined
broadly, to include responsibilities and obligations to students
inside and outside the classroom, as well to colleagues,
educational institutions, the TESL profession, and society as a
whole.
Scenarios in each chapter provide realistic and compelling
situations for reflection and discussion. The authors then set out
the issues raised, relate them to the classroom environment, and
offer opportunities to examine them in a variety of contexts and to
consider possible solutions to the dilemmas. Issues include
testing, plagiarism, technology, social and political issues
affecting students and the classroom, gift-giving, curriculum
decisions, disruptive students, institutional constraints, academic
freedom, gender, class, and power.
Busy classroom instructors will find this book accessible,
thought-provoking, and relevant to their daily work situations. It
is not intended as a theoretical treatment of ethics and social
justice in ESL, nor does it propose that ESL faculty teach morals
or ethics to students. Rather, it is designed as a concise,
practical introduction to ethical practice for both new and
experienced ESL faculty in post-secondary teaching situations in
the United States, for others interested in the ESL classroom, and
as a text for TESL classes and seminars.
"Ethical Issues for ESL Faculty: " *maps new territory in the
field--ethical issues in TESL, particularly as encountered by
post-secondary classroom teachers, are not often discussed in ESL
publications;
*makes the complex issues of ethics in the context of social
justice accessible to TESL practitioners; and
*includes useful resources, such as additional scenarios for
discussion, an extensive reference list, and selected
ethics-related Web sites.
This book explicitly addresses ethical dilemmas and issues that
post-secondary ESL faculty commonly encounter and examines them in
the framework of social justice concerns. Ethics is defined
broadly, to include responsibilities and obligations to students
inside and outside the classroom, as well to colleagues,
educational institutions, the TESL profession, and society as a
whole.
Scenarios in each chapter provide realistic and compelling
situations for reflection and discussion. The authors then set out
the issues raised, relate them to the classroom environment, and
offer opportunities to examine them in a variety of contexts and to
consider possible solutions to the dilemmas. Issues include
testing, plagiarism, technology, social and political issues
affecting students and the classroom, gift-giving, curriculum
decisions, disruptive students, institutional constraints, academic
freedom, gender, class, and power.
Busy classroom instructors will find this book accessible,
thought-provoking, and relevant to their daily work situations. It
is not intended as a theoretical treatment of ethics and social
justice in ESL, nor does it propose that ESL faculty teach morals
or ethics to students. Rather, it is designed as a concise,
practical introduction to ethical practice for both new and
experienced ESL faculty in post-secondary teaching situations in
the United States, for others interested in the ESL classroom, and
as a text for TESL classes and seminars.
"Ethical Issues for ESL Faculty: " *maps new territory in the
field--ethical issues in TESL, particularly as encountered by
post-secondary classroom teachers, are not often discussed in ESL
publications;
*makes the complex issues of ethics in the context of social
justice accessible to TESL practitioners; and
*includes useful resources, such as additional scenarios for
discussion, an extensive reference list, and selected
ethics-related Web sites.
Per Ardua ad Humour is a personal collection of humourous
'situations' experienced by Johnny Johnson over a period of more
than thirty years service with the Royal Air Force. The stories
have been wonderfully highlighted by 'Patch' his cartoonist. They
originated from his very first days with the Air Force to his last
days of service. Many anecdotes have to do with his profession as
an Air Traffic Controller and also as an airborne radar
'Calibrator' operating worldwide between the United Kingdom and the
Far East. Many of those who read this book will, I am sure,
identify with some of the stories.
Johnny Johnson has been awarded an MBE for his remarkable services
in World War II 'I was anxious to fight. Hitler was the bastard who
had started all this and he needed sorting out. We were under
threat. Everything we stood for: our country, our families and our
way of life was being attacked by this maniac. He could not be
allowed to win. So for me and many, many others like me, there was
no alternative. We were in a pickle and something had to be done.'
Johnny Johnson is 95 years old and one of very few men who can
recall first-hand the most daring and ingenious air raid of all
time. He can also vividly remember his childhood spent working on a
farm with his controlling father, the series of events that led him
to the RAF and the rigorous training that followed. But it was his
decision to join 617 Squadron, and the consequences, that have
truly stayed etched in his mind. On 16 May 1943, Johnny, alongside
132 specially selected comrades, took off from Scampton airbase in
Lincolnshire. For six weeks they had been trained to fulfil one
mission that was near impossible: to destroy three dams deep within
Germany's Ruhr Valley. It was a daring task but, against the odds,
Johnny and his crew survived. Sadly, 53 comrades did not. For the
first time, Johnny relives every moment of that fatal night - and
the devastating aftermath. He recalls with unique wit and insight
the difficult training conducted in secrecy, the race against time
to release the bombs, and the sheer strength and bravery shown by a
small unit faced with great adversity and uncertainty. Embodying a
whole squadron, and leaving a lasting legacy for generations to
come, Johnny's story is like no other.
This polished study of the uses of reason in poetry is a
philosophical meditation. Its basic thesis is that poetry is the
objective correlative of reason, and in this sense it attacks both
romantic subjectivism and the more general tendency to consider
poetic effects in terms of reason-emotion dichotomy.
Originally published in 1966.
A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the
latest in digital technology to make available again books from our
distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These
editions are published unaltered from the original, and are
presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both
historical and cultural value.
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