Voices in English Classrooms: Honoring Diversity and ChangeLenora Cook, Helen C. Lodge, Helen Chanda Lodge This book presents a collection of classroom practices that view the personal experiences of diverse student populations as valuable resources for instruction. It offers teachers various responses to the challenges posed by students' cultural, linguistic, and social group affiliations. The book contains essays arranged into three interwoven strands: "Hearing Every Voice," the language strand, encourages peer appreciation of dialect and language diversity; "Preserving Voices," the composition strand, emphasizes the bond between writer and audience that leads to understanding self and others; and "Affirming Voices," the literature strand, expands upon and enriches the traditional canon by dealing with literary selections that reflect the experiences of diverse groups within United States society. Essays and their authors include: (1) "Celebrating Diversity through the Language Autobiography" (G. Douglas Meyers); (2) "Classroom Diversity as Strength: A Language-Centered Unit" (Kyoko Sato and others); (3) "'How You Not Be Knowin' Dat?': Using Language Study to Enfranchise Diversity" (Barbara Osburg); (4) "Becoming Centered in the Students: What a Teacher Can Do for Underprepared Learners" (Smokey Wilson); (5) "'Worldview' Publication as an Incentive for Excellence in Writing" (Susan B. Andrews and John Creed); (6) "Autobiography as a Liberating Force in the Basic Writing Classroom" (Brenda M. Greene); (7) "Bridging Cross-Cultural Differences through Writing" (Sarah Coprich Johnson and Julia Stutts Austin); (8) "'Delicious of the New': ESL as Poetry, EFL as Literary Analysis" (James W. Penha); (9) "'Break on Through': An Interdisciplinary Approach to Composition" (Michael G. Battin); (10) "Environmental Writing and Minority Education" (Luke Wallin); (11) "Successful Teaching Practices for Sexual Minority Students in Writing Courses: Four Teachers at Work" (Sarah-Hope Parmeter and others); (12) "The Western Illinois University Minority Summer Tutoring Program: A University/Junior High School Collaborative Effort" (Kathy H. Barclay and William Mosley); (13) "Real Voices: Action and Involvement in Secondary English Classrooms" (Lenora (Leni) Cook); (14) "When Wordsworth Is Too Tame: Merging Minority Literature with the Classics in the Secondary Language Arts Curriculum" (P.L. Thomas); (15) "Teaching the 'Thief of Bagdad' as an Interdisciplinary, Middle School Unit" (Martin Mullarkey); (16) "An Approach to Teaching Four Poems about Education: A Thematic Unit for Pre-Freshman Minority Students" (Mary Sauter Comfort); (17) "Caribbean Literature as Catalyst in the Composition Classroom" (Keith Gilyard and others); (18) "A Fiesta of Voices: Regional Literature in the Multicultural Classroom" (Jeffrey Laing); and (19) "Expanding the Literary Canon through Perceptions of Diversity and the American Dream" (Eileen I. Oliver). (NKA). |
Contents
Language Diversity as Classroom | 1 |
A LanguageCentered Unit | 11 |
Using Language Study | 24 |
Copyright | |
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academic advanced placement African American Alaska Alaska Native American students Asian Asian American Black English CFS students characters Chukchi classroom College composition course cultural dents describe develop dialect discussion diversity ence English 270 Eskimo ESL students essay ethnic example experience explore Figure film focus goals guage high school Hispanic homophobia instructors international students Inupiat journal junior high students language autobiography laserdisc learning lesbian lesbian and gay letter exchange linguistic literary literature lives Malcolm X Mexico movie multicultural Native American NCTE pen pals poem poetry questions racism Raisin reading and writing regional literature responses selections semester sentences sexual minority students share speak story strategies student-centered students read taught teacher teaching texts Thief of Bagdad tion traditional tutors underground city understand unit University vocabulary voice Western Illinois University words York
References to this book
Voicing Ourselves: Whose Words We Use When We Talk about Books Christian Knoeller Limited preview - 1998 |