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In a time of declining resources in institutions of higher
education, we grapple with how priorities are to be set for the
limited resources available. Most vulnerable are those students
labeled underprepared by colleges and universities. Should we argue
that the limited resources available ought to be used to support
these students through their undergraduate years? And, if we decide
that we want to do that, what evidence of their potential for
success can we provide that will justify the use of these
resources? Through longitudinal research that follows students who
have been so labeled over all their college years, we can begin to
find answers to these questions.
"Time to Know Them" is the first book that follows the experiences
of a group of students over their entire academic experience. No
previous studies have brought together the factors incorporated in
this study:
*examining writing and learning on a true longitudinal
basis;
*studying a multicultural urban population;
*investigating the relationship between writing and learning by
examining papers written over time for regularly assigned academic
courses across a range of disciplines; and
*taking into consideration non-academic factors that influence
academic performance such as race, gender, socio-economic status,
and ideological orientation.
Through interviews twice a semester over six years, the collection
of papers written for all courses, observations of instructional
settings, and analysis of required institutional tests of writing,
the author has been able to pull together a more complete picture
of writing and intellectual development over the college years than
has previously been available in any study. Students are seen to
acquire the ability to handle more complex reasoning tasks as they
find themselves in more challenging intellectual settings and where
risk-taking and exploration of new ideas are valued. The
integration of students' previous life experiences into their
academic studies allows them to analyze, critique, modify, and
apply their previously held world views to their new learning.
These changes are seen to occur over time with instructional
settings and support providing key roles in writing development.
Personal factors in students' lives present difficulties that
require persistence and dedication to overcome. Never before have
the complexities of real individual lives as they affect academic
performance been so clearly presented.
In a time of declining resources in institutions of higher
education, we grapple with how priorities are to be set for the
limited resources available. Most vulnerable are those students
labeled underprepared by colleges and universities. Should we argue
that the limited resources available ought to be used to support
these students through their undergraduate years? And, if we decide
that we want to do that, what evidence of their potential for
success can we provide that will justify the use of these
resources? Through longitudinal research that follows students who
have been so labeled over all their college years, we can begin to
find answers to these questions.
"Time to Know Them" is the first book that follows the experiences
of a group of students over their entire academic experience. No
previous studies have brought together the factors incorporated in
this study:
*examining writing and learning on a true longitudinal
basis;
*studying a multicultural urban population;
*investigating the relationship between writing and learning by
examining papers written over time for regularly assigned academic
courses across a range of disciplines; and
*taking into consideration non-academic factors that influence
academic performance such as race, gender, socio-economic status,
and ideological orientation.
Through interviews twice a semester over six years, the collection
of papers written for all courses, observations of instructional
settings, and analysis of required institutional tests of writing,
the author has been able to pull together a more complete picture
of writing and intellectual development over the college years than
has previously been available in any study. Students are seen to
acquire the ability to handle more complex reasoning tasks as they
find themselves in more challenging intellectual settings and where
risk-taking and exploration of new ideas are valued. The
integration of students' previous life experiences into their
academic studies allows them to analyze, critique, modify, and
apply their previously held world views to their new learning.
These changes are seen to occur over time with instructional
settings and support providing key roles in writing development.
Personal factors in students' lives present difficulties that
require persistence and dedication to overcome. Never before have
the complexities of real individual lives as they affect academic
performance been so clearly presented.
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