Multilingual Learners in College Classrooms
E-Book, Englisch, 252 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-135-62029-5
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Crossing the Curriculum: Multilingual Learners in College Classrooms is unique in bringing together the perspectives of researchers, students, and teachers. These multiple lenses allow for a richly layered picture of how students and teachers actually experience college classrooms. Common themes and pedagogical principles resonate across the three distinct sections of the book:
*Part One, "Investigating Students' Experiences Across the Curriculum: Through the Eyes of Classroom Researchers," consists of chapters written by ESOL and composition researchers who have investigated multilingual students' experiences in undergraduate courses across the curriculum.
*Part Two, "Learning Across the Curriculum: Through Students' Eyes," consists of chapters written by two multilingual learners who chronicled their experiences as they crossed the curriculum over time.
*Part Three, "Engaging Students in Learning: Through the Eyes of Faculty Across the Curriculum," consists of chapters written by faculty from several academic fields--Anthropology, Philosophy, Nursing, Literature, Sociology, and Asian American Studies--who discuss their own attempts to address the needs of multilingual learners in their classrooms.
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Contents: Preface. Part I: Investigating Students' Experiences Across the Curriculum: Through the Eyes of Classroom Researchers. V. Zamel, Strangers in Academia: The Experiences of Faculty and ESOL Students Across the Curriculum. R. Spack, The Acquisition of Academic Literacy in a Second Language: A Longitudinal Case Study, Updated. M.S. Sternglass, "It Became Easier Over Time": A Case Study of the Relationship Between Writing, Learning, and the Creation of Knowledge. T. Smoke, Lessons From Ming: Helping Students Use Writing to Learn. E. Kutz, From Outsider to Insider: Studying Academic Discourse Communities Across the Curriculum. Part II: Learning Across the Curriculum: Through Students' Eyes. M. Muñoz, Martha's Reflections on Learning Across the Curriculum. M. Kainose, Motoko's Reflections on Learning Across the Curriculum. Part III: Engaging Students in Learning: Through the Eyes of Faculty Across the Curriculum. T. Sieber, Excelling in the Critical Study of Culture: The Multilingual-Multicultural Student Advantage. S.M. Fishman, L. McCarthy, When Writing-to-Learn Is Not Enough. K.B. Alster, Writing in Nursing Education and Nursing Practice. R. Srikanth, The Soil Under the Gravel: ESOL Learners and Writing About Literature. E. Disch, "Still Cannot Solve It": Engaging ESOL Students in the Classroom Conversation. P.N-C. Kiang, Voicing Names and Naming Voices: Pedagogy and Persistence in an Asian American Studies Classroom.