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Whenever schools adopt programs that reflect political climate
changes in the outside world, the temperature of discussion among
politicians, students, teachers and parents rises to a fever pitch.
What happens when programs designed to promote equitability across
gender difference are applied to individual schools, with their
unique demographics and local cultures?
In this groundbreaking collection, which draws its insights from
the classroom as well as the faculty room and the dining room
table, contributors expose the volatility of gender reform programs
currently in practice. Everybody speaks here, from old-guard
teachers and principals to radical educators, class clowns to
teachers' pets. Drawing on a deep knowledge of gender issues in
schools and of feminist theories, policies and practices, this
compelling and provocative collection will surprise, unsettle and
inspire parents, teachers and researchers.
Answering Back exposes the volatility of gender reform in many different schools and classrooms. It tells stories in close up and from below, allowing everyone to talk: anxious boys, naughty girls, cantankerous teachers, pontificating principals and feisty feminists. This book challenges many sacred ideas about gender reform in schools and will surprise and unsettle teachers and researchers. It draws on a deep knowledge of gender issues in schools and of feminist theories, policies and practices. It is compelling and provocative reading at the leading edge.
In this text various specialists in education consider the merits
of current thinking on self-esteem in relation to their field of
expertise. Each concludes that a radical reassessment of the ways
in which we think about self-esteem and its relationship to girls'
schooling is needed.
Meredith Sue Willis's "Out of the Mountains" is a collection of
thirteen short stories set in contemporary Appalachia. Firmly
grounded in place, the stories voyage out into the conflicting
cultural identities that native Appalachians experience as they
balance mainstream and mountain identities.
Willis's stories explore the complex negotiations between longtime
natives of the region and its newcomers and the rifts that develop
within families over current issues such as mountaintop removal and
homophobia. Always, however, the situations depicted in these
stories are explored in the service of a deeper understanding of
the people involved, and of the place. This is not the mythic
version of Appalachia, but the Appalachia of the twenty-first
century.
The narrator of Meredith Sue Willis's new novel has just turned
forty, quit her job, been jilted by her live-in boyfriend and
suspended by her therapist for nonpayment. Against her better
judgment, she takes a job at a settlement house known as "Love
Palace" in a run-down community that is about to be razed for urban
renewal. Here Martha discovers that she has a talent for managing
the dysfunctional institution and its staff. She is attracted by
the charismatic reverend who oversees Love Palace as well as by
Robby, one of the staff members, who is rich, handsome, recently
released from a hospital after a suicide attempt, and intensely
ambivalent about his sexuality. Along with the Love Palace crew of
runaways, derelicts, struggling blue collar workers, and a former
Black Panther among others, Martha has to deal with her
ex-hillbilly mother, who favors shoulder pads and big hair; her
sister the big-shot lawyer; and her dying Jewish grandmother.
BLAZING PENCILS is a practical, enjoyable guide to writing stories
and essays. Based on a master teacher's decades of experience
working with students of all ages, BLAZING PENCILS will encourage
the aspiring young writer at every step of the process of creating
fiction and nonfiction. This book offers clearly articulated
concepts as well as time-tested suggestions and tips. Writing
samples include quotations from the masters of English and American
prose but also from dozens of young writers as they learn to master
the literary arts.
Celebrated novelist and story-writer Meredith Sue Willis has also
published three widely praised books about the writing process:
Personal Fiction Writing, Deep Revision, and Blazing Pencils. In
Ten Strategies to Write Your Novel, Willis now turns her attention
to the specific delights and challenges of the the big fictional
"canvas." This clear, eminently practical guide offers both general
approaches and targeted suggestions for working through the complex
tasks of writing a novel. Willis describes multiple entry ways into
this formidable genre, offers vivid illustrations from classic and
contemporary novels, and provides dozens of creative exercises to
jump-start the writing process. Ten Strategies to Start Your Novel
is destined to become a classic guide for newcomers and veterans
alike.
A Space Apart is so deftly and subtly written, I hardly noticed how
involved I'd become until I'd read the last page and turned it,
wanting more. The Scarlin family is going to be with me for a very
long time. - Anne Tyler Willis fleshes out with warmth and
tenderness the complexities of family love, which not only defines
commitment but deepens the need. An important new talent. -The
Kirkus Reviews The narrative carries warmth and strength. The
people are as real as your next door neighbors. - Houston Chronicle
Willis views the Scarlin family ties and loyalties, limits and
tensions, with realism, sensitivity and precision. A noteworthy
first novel. - Publisher's Weekly This is the story of a broken
family trying to mend itself through three generations. It is a
painful but essential process, and like all such repair jobs, it is
only partly successful. Before it is over we come to know John and
Vera and Mary Kay, as well as Vera's daughters, Lee and Tonie- to
understand the wars they must declare and the peaces that they are
able to proclaim within the state of being Scarlins. exquisite
care, detailing the lives of a West Virginia preacher's family:
John Scarlin, minister and son of the Preacher, a wild old
born-again Baptist; John's sturdy sister Mary Katherine; his
capricious wife Vera, a strong character who commands attention in
one fine scene after another; and his daughter Lee and Tonie who
grow up to reject and embrace the meaning of Galatia, their
hometown...Finally what is revealed by a family, inextricably bound
together while struggling with each other's need to find a place
apart. Narratively skilled and disciplined, this is an impressive
debut. - Library Journal
On a distant world where interplanetary colonists have struggled
for generations to survive, a young woman named Espera travels to
the fabled City Built of Starships on a quest that may determine
the fate of the human species.
Smart, sassy, and eleven years old, Billie Lee lives with her
eccentric, multi-racial family in New Jersey. Then Billie's white
cousin, Celia, shows up and changes everything. A sleepover at
Celia's fancy suburban home releases a food of questions. How can
Billie be Black but also White? How can she convince her best
friend, Eutreece, that Billie hasn't betrayed their friendship? And
when these kids get thrown together at a neighborhood barbecue, how
can Billie and her friends accept one another long enough to solve
the mystery of a neighbor named Neighbor, who has hidden something
strange down by the canal? The answers to these questions challenge
Billie far more than she ever thought possible.
Fourth-grader Marco has his hands full when his best friend is
chosen to be star of the class play and his sister is accused of
killing a gerbil in her kindergarten class.
Willis treats the writing of fiction as a natural process that
anyone can do with pleasure. The book includes over 400 helpful
writing assignments for all age levels. In addition, teachers will
appreciate the appendixes on writing ideas according to age level,
other books on writing, and magazines that publish student writing.
"A terrific resource for the classroom as well as the novice
writer."-Harvard Educational Review.
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Trespassers (Paperback)
Meredith Sue Willis
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R509
R431
Discovery Miles 4 310
Save R78 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Marco believes he has special powers that help him make friends
with the class bully and deal with some tough situations in the
rough neighborhood where they live.
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