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This book tracks the development of Exploratory Practice since the
early 1990s as an original form of practitioner research in the
field of English language teaching. Drawing on case studies,
vignettes and narratives from teachers and learners around the
world as they experienced Exploratory Practice in their different
contexts, Hanks examines the theoretical and philosophical
underpinnings of the Exploratory Practice framework and asks what
the principles really mean in practice. For language professionals
considering investigating their classrooms and their
teaching/learning practices rigorously and thoughtfully, this book
breaks new ground, arguing for a fresh perspective: (exploratory)
practice-as-research. Judith Hanks is Lecturer in TESOL at the
University of Leeds, UK. Her work bridges specialist areas in
language teacher education, intercultural communication, TESOL and
EAP.
This edited collection explores the use of Exploratory Practice
(EP) by language teachers in classrooms. Written by practitioners,
the chapters showcase unique examples of each principle of EP, with
topics ranging from mentoring practitioner researchers, to teaching
and learning in EAP, and investigating curriculum development in
language teaching programs. The book provides example EP studies
and gives voice to practitioners' experiences of the challenges
they experienced as well as the benefits. Examples include tackling
intercultural communication in linguistically and culturally
diverse classrooms; pedagogy and curriculum design in language
teaching; explorations of continuing professional development in
language education. In doing so, it offers tools that can be
transferred to other classroom contexts and used to aid teacher
development. The concluding chapter highlights critical aspects of
Exploratory Practice which emerge in the studies and examines how
practitioners advanced their understandings. This book will appeal
to those working in Applied Linguistics, TESOL research, as well as
language teachers and teacher educators.
This book-length treatment of Exploratory Practice introduces five
propositions about learners as practitioners of learning who are
capable of developing their expertise through conducting research
in and on their own classroom learning lives.
This edited collection explores the use of Exploratory Practice
(EP) by language teachers in classrooms. Written by practitioners,
the chapters showcase unique examples of each principle of EP, with
topics ranging from mentoring practitioner researchers, to teaching
and learning in EAP, and investigating curriculum development in
language teaching programs. The book provides example EP studies
and gives voice to practitioners' experiences of the challenges
they experienced as well as the benefits. Examples include tackling
intercultural communication in linguistically and culturally
diverse classrooms; pedagogy and curriculum design in language
teaching; explorations of continuing professional development in
language education. In doing so, it offers tools that can be
transferred to other classroom contexts and used to aid teacher
development. The concluding chapter highlights critical aspects of
Exploratory Practice which emerge in the studies and examines how
practitioners advanced their understandings. This book will appeal
to those working in Applied Linguistics, TESOL research, as well as
language teachers and teacher educators.
This book tracks the development of Exploratory Practice since the
early 1990s as an original form of practitioner research in the
field of English language teaching. Drawing on case studies,
vignettes and narratives from teachers and learners around the
world as they experienced Exploratory Practice in their different
contexts, Hanks examines the theoretical and philosophical
underpinnings of the Exploratory Practice framework and asks what
the principles really mean in practice. For language professionals
considering investigating their classrooms and their
teaching/learning practices rigorously and thoughtfully, this book
breaks new ground, arguing for a fresh perspective: (exploratory)
practice-as-research. Judith Hanks is Lecturer in TESOL at the
University of Leeds, UK. Her work bridges specialist areas in
language teacher education, intercultural communication, TESOL and
EAP.
If we want to treat learners as practitioners of learning,
alongside teachers as practitioners of teaching, and therefore
capable of reaping the developmental benefits of practitioner
research, how can we best proceed? For Allwright and Hanks the
answer lies in Exploratory Practice - an inclusive form of
practitioner research developed largely in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
and in Lancaster, England, that enables both learners and teachers
to develop their own understandings of their learning and teaching
lives.
After arguing that developments in the field of applied linguistics
have fallen short of establishing such a perspective on learners,
and reviewing current research models, the authors propose seven
principles for a truly inclusive extension of practitioner research
- Exploratory Practice.
Five full chapters document, through learner and teacher narratives
from around the world, how Exploratory Practice can engage learners
as developing practitioners of learning, and enhance the learning
process by enriching human relationships in the classroom.
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