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Composing a Culture

Autor Bonnie S Sunstein
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 iun 1994
A summer writing program for teachers lasts only a few weeks, but it is an important event, sometimes a turning point in a teacher's career. In Composing a Culture, Sunstein reads one program for teachers and writes portraits of three high school teachers who attend: Therese Deni, Joyce Choate, and Dorothy Spofford. Between these chapters, Sunstein also creates interests--shorter landscapes of other participants and events.
Often, teachers label a summer experience as transformation. Drawing from anthropology, folklore, composition theory, educational philosophy, psychology, and women's studies, Sunstein details the informal conversations, events, and personal stories in which the seeds of their changes take root.
As a longtime teacher herself, Sunstein looks into a familiar place and sees an unfamiliar irony: the teacher as student, away from her institution in time and space, participating in an event deliberately designed to be different from school. She turns away from the classroom in order to understand it better. She documents what it is to be a teacher.
In Composing a Culture, teachers read their experience, write for themselves, and plan for their students in a culture quite different from school. And as they do it, they re-think the culture of school.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780867093421
ISBN-10: 0867093420
Pagini: 271
Dimensiuni: 153 x 228 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Heinemann Educational Books

Descriere

A summer writing program for teachers lasts only a few weeks, but it is an important event, sometimes a turning point in a teacher's career. In Composing a Culture, Sunstein "reads" one program for teachers and writes portraits of three high school teachers who attend: Therese Deni, Joyce Choate, and Dorothy Spofford. Between these chapters, Sunstein also creates interests--shorter landscapes of other participants and events.
Often, teachers label a summer experience as "transformation." Drawing from anthropology, folklore, composition theory, educational philosophy, psychology, and women's studies, Sunstein details the informal conversations, events, and personal stories in which the seeds of their changes take root.
As a longtime teacher herself, Sunstein looks into a familiar place and sees an unfamiliar irony: the teacher as student, away from her institution in time and space, participating in an event deliberately designed to be different from school. She turns away from the classroom in order to understand it better. She documents what it is to be a teacher.
In Composing a Culture, teachers "read" their experience, write for themselves, and plan for their students in a culture quite different from school. And as they do it, they re-think the culture of school.

Cuprins

Contents: Preface: "A Little Bit of a Cult"
Intertext: Confessions of a Participant-Observer
Distributed Selves and a Divided Front
Intertext: Caring Away from Home: Poetic Sanctuary
Therese Deni: Finding Authority on the Inside
Intertext: Getting the Words Second Hand: Deaf People Can Do Everything--Except Hear
Dorothy Spofford: Distance, Resistance, and Response
Intertext: To Really Cheer: Questioning Our Assumptions
Joyce Choate: The Matter of Head Watching
Intertext: Of Fathers, Sons, and Special Education: Making Meaning Is the Test
Back to School: Summer Revisions