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micklethwait

Why Give Space to Writing Teachers Who Lack Passion or Knowledge? - Letters - Blogs - T... - 0 views

  • Chronicle critics question course outcomes
  • Chronicle critics question research.
  • Chronicle critics offer faulty visions for the course.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Chronicle critics question whether the course should exist.
  • Chronicle critics volunteer that they lack expertise in the teaching of writing.
  • According to Bauerlein: Research in writing should “make students better business communicators, more efficient readers and writers, more productive workers.”
micklethwait

Kam and Meinema, Context - 1 views

  • Culturally Coined
  • Büker (2003, 46-48)
  • actual and assumed differences
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • processes and products
  • content knowledge
  • Biggs notes that research results indicate that the difficulties perceived by international students differ in extent from problems perceived by local students, and not in kind.
  • The ETOC, the Expert Centre on Language, Communication and Education
  • Developing additional (didactic) course elements (e.g. developing writing assignments). Making teaching aids (handouts, good practices, assignments) available (by means of an online writing center). Developing policies concerning the teaching of communicative skills, aimed at imbedding teaching communicative skills into curricula (Van Kruiningen, 2004).
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    This one looks most relevant to our goals out of the ones in this journal issue.
micklethwait

WPA / CompPile Research Bibliographies - 2 views

  • Stretch Courses
  • Second Language Writing and Writing Program Administration
  • WAC-WID and Second Language Writers
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Writing-About-Writing Curricula: Origins, Theories, and Initial Field-Tests
  • Directed Self-Placement
  • Global Englishes and Language Difference
micklethwait

Taking Hold of Global Englishes: Intensive English Programs as Brokers of Transnational... - 1 views

  • how literacy is taught and learned transnationally. Specifically, I examine how the transnational political economy of English literacy is negotiated discursively at one US-based IEP (Northwest IEP) through teacher and student talk. From this discourse analysis, I suggest that, in addition to the difficult and time-consuming tasks of language learning, students in my study were involved in and recipients of another, much less visible type of literacy management: the ongoing valuing and defining of each other’s prior literacy-related knowledge vis-à-vis their and other students’ access to global Englishes. Thus, Northwest IEP did more than situate students in relation to privileged English literacy. That institution also served as a broker for the shifting status and subsequent privileging of global Englishes. This dynamic gives insight into how multilingual spaces come to mediate the broader transnational political economy of English literacy. Ultimately, this research shows the value of looking into institutes at the periphery of US higher education, which broadens the field’s linguistic terrain to situate US-based composition as one of many actors across the transnational landscape of higher education.   
micklethwait

RIOT: Threshold concepts and information literacy | Instruction @ the University of Tex... - 0 views

  • They defined 5 criteria for threshold concepts:
  • My initial reaction to the list, perhaps because so much of my work is with first-year students, is that it seems to represent the stumbling blocks for librarians in learning their discipline and not necessarily where we expect students to get stuck, often because we don’t expect them to reach these points in their thinking and learning.
  • librarians are trying to get students to think like an information professional when approaching their research problems.
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