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In April 2004, a group of international scholars convened in
Chicago, Illinois for a workshop of the International Association
for Dialogue Analysis. The selected papers from the workshop which
are included in this volume represent a breadth of theoretical and
methodological perspectives. Together, the variety of perspectives
adds to a deeper understanding of the complex nature of dialogic
interaction. The volume is intended for scholars and students in
the field, offering a view of dialogue analysis from its more
traditional origins to contemporary trends in discourse studies.
This book is an in-depth examination of education and media under
occupation. The contributors to this volume engage dialogue to
explore these domains and their roles and functioning under
occupation while keeping an eye toward resolution, using the
on-going conflict between Palestine and Israel as the focus. The
uniqueness of this collection is not limited to the willingness of
its authors to investigate topics that have often been left out of
the mainstream, but that they actually enter into dialogue with one
another. Education and media are exemplified as domains that can
either maintain the status quo of oppression when used by
policymakers and governments to do so or can be utilized as
mechanisms for change and peacemaking. These contradictory roles
are highlighted throughout this book by multiple voices.
Contextualizing College ESL Classroom Praxis: A Participatory
Approach to Effective Instruction provides pre-service and
in-service teachers with a model for engaging in effective
instruction with the variety of students encountered in college
English as a second language or foreign language classrooms. Along
with the model, the text is designed to help readers develop the
tools to use it within a participatory approach. This approach,
based on the principles of Paulo Freire's critical pedagogy, is
combined with multicultural education and the general tenets of a
communicative approach to language teaching. From the philosophical
to the theoretical to the practical, these strands are combined
into a cohesive whole. The underlying premise is that the best way
to develop an understanding of a participatory approach is to
engage in it. Throughout the book, readers are asked to apply
problem-posing--a learning process that begins with naming issues,
reflecting on them and possible solutions, and acting upon one's
ideas. Questions addressed include: *What is the nature of process
over product? *Is a new definition of effective instruction
necessary? *What are the factors that can affect second language
acquisition? *What do teachers believe about effective language
instruction? *What do students believe about effective language
instruction? *What makes pedagogy effective? *How do teachers and
students relate in the classroom? *What does instruction mean for
students? *How can effective praxis be adapted to various contexts?
Each chapter includes Pre-Reading Questions, Post-Reading
Questions, a topic for a Reflective Journal, and Follow-Up
Activities. These provide opportunities to enhance comprehension of
the material, to co-construct new knowledge with classmates, and to
review personal beliefs and ideas in an effort to modify or
reinforce them in one's own developing model for effective language
instruction.
Contextualizing College ESL Classroom Praxis: A Participatory
Approach to Effective Instruction provides pre-service and
in-service teachers with a model for engaging in effective
instruction with the variety of students encountered in college
English as a second language or foreign language classrooms. Along
with the model, the text is designed to help readers develop the
tools to use it within a participatory approach. This approach,
based on the principles of Paulo Freire's critical pedagogy, is
combined with multicultural education and the general tenets of a
communicative approach to language teaching. From the philosophical
to the theoretical to the practical, these strands are combined
into a cohesive whole.The underlying premise is that the best way
to develop an understanding of a participatory approach is to
engage in it. Throughout the book, readers are asked to apply
problem-posing--a learning process that begins with naming issues,
reflecting on them and possible solutions, and acting upon one's
ideas. Questions addressed include:What is the nature of process
over product?Is a new definition of effective instruction
necessary?What are the factors that can affect second language
acquisition?What do teachers believe about effective language
instruction?What do students believe about effective language
instruction?What makes pedagogy effective?How do teachers and
students relate in the classroom?What does instruction mean for
students?How can effective praxis be adapted to various
contexts?Each chapter includes Pre-Reading Questions, Post-Reading
Questions, a topic for a Reflective Journal, and Follow-Up
Activities. These provide opportunities to enhance comprehension of
the material, to co-construct new knowledge with classmates, and to
review personal beliefs and ideas in an effort to modify or
reinforce them in one's own de
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