Teaching and Researching ELLs’ Disciplinary Literacies: Systemic Functional Linguistics in Action in the Context of U.S. School Reform: Language, Culture, and Teaching Series
Autor Meg Gebharden Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 feb 2019
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
---|---|---|
Paperback (1) | 315.70 lei 3-5 săpt. | +38.32 lei 5-11 zile |
Taylor & Francis – 21 feb 2019 | 315.70 lei 3-5 săpt. | +38.32 lei 5-11 zile |
Hardback (1) | 983.09 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
Taylor & Francis – 25 feb 2019 | 983.09 lei 6-8 săpt. |
Din seria Language, Culture, and Teaching Series
- 8% Preț: 406.38 lei
- Preț: 332.19 lei
- Preț: 290.20 lei
- Preț: 426.09 lei
- Preț: 377.61 lei
- Preț: 303.74 lei
- Preț: 428.91 lei
- Preț: 343.25 lei
- Preț: 444.77 lei
- Preț: 389.89 lei
- Preț: 375.32 lei
- Preț: 349.05 lei
- Preț: 444.84 lei
- Preț: 369.52 lei
- Preț: 450.10 lei
- Preț: 197.94 lei
- Preț: 387.06 lei
- Preț: 357.62 lei
- Preț: 385.74 lei
- 15% Preț: 437.44 lei
- Preț: 389.00 lei
- Preț: 484.84 lei
- Preț: 475.70 lei
- Preț: 374.79 lei
- Preț: 310.02 lei
- Preț: 443.52 lei
- 18% Preț: 1096.47 lei
Preț: 315.70 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 474
Preț estimativ în valută:
60.42€ • 62.76$ • 50.19£
60.42€ • 62.76$ • 50.19£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 13-27 ianuarie 25
Livrare express 28 decembrie 24 - 03 ianuarie 25 pentru 48.31 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781138090903
ISBN-10: 1138090905
Pagini: 298
Ilustrații: 35 Tables, black and white; 16 Line drawings, black and white; 10 Halftones, black and white
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.86 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Language, Culture, and Teaching Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1138090905
Pagini: 298
Ilustrații: 35 Tables, black and white; 16 Line drawings, black and white; 10 Halftones, black and white
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.86 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Language, Culture, and Teaching Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate and UndergraduateCuprins
Figures
Tables
Acknowledgements
1 Teaching and researching ELLs’ disciplinary literacy development in hard times: A critical perspective
Rationale: The making of a "perfect storm"
My literacy biography: Learning (and not learning) to become a critical reader, writer, and thinker
A critical approach to understanding language, learning, and social change in U.S. public schools
Overview of chapters
Praxis
2 Celine’s questions: Race, immigration, and literacy development in schools
Celine’s literacy practices: A case study
Crossing linguistic, cultural, and institutional boundaries in schools
Text/context dynamics
Celine’s educational background
Mr. Banks’ feedback
Rethinking the word "grammar" from an SFL perspective
Summary
Praxis
3 Skinner, Chomsky, and Halliday: Shifting conceptions of grammar and language learning
Skinner: A behavioral perspective
Chomsky: A psycholinguistic perspective
Halliday: A social semiotic perspective
Summary and critique of different perspectives of grammar and approaches to language teaching and learning in schools
Praxis
4 Genres, registers, and the teaching and learning cycle
Text/context dynamics: Analyzing email requests sent to a professor
SFL, genres, and registers
SFL in action: The teaching and learning cycle in K-12 schools
The teaching and learning cycle and Martin’s genre theory
SFL, genre theory, and the TLC in the context of U.S. school reforms
ACCELA’s approach to the TLC
Summary
Praxis
5 Registers: Critically analyzing field, tenor, and mode choices
Field: Constructing content, ideas, and experiences
Tenor: Constructing voice, social roles, and power dynamics
Mode: Managing the flow of information
Summary
Praxis
6 Policies and practices to support ELLs’ disciplinary literacy development: A civil rights perspective
Twenty-first century demographic changes in U.S. public schools
Students’ civil rights and approaches to language education
K-12 ESL program types
The WIDA Consortium
Summary
Praxis
7 Shifting conceptions of equity: Standardization, accountability, and privatization in school reform
No Child Left Behind (NCLB)
English-only policies and anti-bilingual education ideologies
Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and the disciplinary literacy development of all students
Standardization and accountability in teacher evaluation
Summary
Praxis
8 Placing the education of ELLs in a historic, economic, and political context
The growth of the modern school system: Two faces of the Progressive Era
The schooling of immigrants in the 20th century
The schooling of immigrants in the 21st century
Summary
Praxis
9 Putting it all together: SFL in Action
Text/context dynamics in U.S. public schools: A review of key concepts
Teaching and researching ELLs' disciplinary literacy development at Milltown High
Implications for classroom practice and research
Summary
Praxis
Tables
Acknowledgements
1 Teaching and researching ELLs’ disciplinary literacy development in hard times: A critical perspective
Rationale: The making of a "perfect storm"
My literacy biography: Learning (and not learning) to become a critical reader, writer, and thinker
A critical approach to understanding language, learning, and social change in U.S. public schools
Overview of chapters
Praxis
2 Celine’s questions: Race, immigration, and literacy development in schools
Celine’s literacy practices: A case study
Crossing linguistic, cultural, and institutional boundaries in schools
Text/context dynamics
Celine’s educational background
Mr. Banks’ feedback
Rethinking the word "grammar" from an SFL perspective
Summary
Praxis
3 Skinner, Chomsky, and Halliday: Shifting conceptions of grammar and language learning
Skinner: A behavioral perspective
Chomsky: A psycholinguistic perspective
Halliday: A social semiotic perspective
Summary and critique of different perspectives of grammar and approaches to language teaching and learning in schools
Praxis
4 Genres, registers, and the teaching and learning cycle
Text/context dynamics: Analyzing email requests sent to a professor
SFL, genres, and registers
SFL in action: The teaching and learning cycle in K-12 schools
The teaching and learning cycle and Martin’s genre theory
SFL, genre theory, and the TLC in the context of U.S. school reforms
ACCELA’s approach to the TLC
Summary
Praxis
5 Registers: Critically analyzing field, tenor, and mode choices
Field: Constructing content, ideas, and experiences
Tenor: Constructing voice, social roles, and power dynamics
Mode: Managing the flow of information
Summary
Praxis
6 Policies and practices to support ELLs’ disciplinary literacy development: A civil rights perspective
Twenty-first century demographic changes in U.S. public schools
Students’ civil rights and approaches to language education
K-12 ESL program types
The WIDA Consortium
Summary
Praxis
7 Shifting conceptions of equity: Standardization, accountability, and privatization in school reform
No Child Left Behind (NCLB)
English-only policies and anti-bilingual education ideologies
Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and the disciplinary literacy development of all students
Standardization and accountability in teacher evaluation
Summary
Praxis
8 Placing the education of ELLs in a historic, economic, and political context
The growth of the modern school system: Two faces of the Progressive Era
The schooling of immigrants in the 20th century
The schooling of immigrants in the 21st century
Summary
Praxis
9 Putting it all together: SFL in Action
Text/context dynamics in U.S. public schools: A review of key concepts
Teaching and researching ELLs' disciplinary literacy development at Milltown High
Implications for classroom practice and research
Summary
Praxis
Notă biografică
Meg Gebhard is Professor of Applied Linguistics and co-director of the Secondary English Education Program at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA.
Recenzii
"This book is a highly significant contribution to second language research, showing a deep respect for the needs and interests of multilingual learners, their teachers and language researchers. Informed by a critical perspective on systemic functional linguistics, Gebhard provides readers with a highly accessible and graduated introduction to SFL-informed literacy instruction and critical discourse analysis. What makes the work unique is its use of highly contextualized examples of teacher and student textual practices across the curriculum; and also its widening circles of recommended practice across the chapters that move into consideration of the institutional and societal discourses that inform the teaching/learning culture in our public schools."
— Ruth Harman, University of Georgia, USA
"Meg Gebhard does a brilliant job of translating long histories of complex theories into digestible chunks to expand understandings about how language works, and how we can best support its development in school settings. Theoretical and practical aspects are closely entwined, and the information is incrementally layered for a final result that is both enlightening and easy to read. Each chapter ends with a praxis section that nicely supports practitioners into application. Through the theory, the praxis, and the technicalities of language – as well as the personal details in the case studies – Gebhard keeps this text deeply human, illuminating, and easy to connect to."
— Fernanda Kray, Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
"This book is a highly significant contribution to second language research, showing a deep respect for the needs and interests of multilingual learners, their teachers and language researchers. Informed by a critical perspective on systemic functional linguistics, Gebhard provides readers with a highly accessible and graduated introduction to SFL-informed literacy instruction and critical discourse analysis. What makes the work unique is its use of highly contextualized examples of teacher and student textual practices across the curriculum; and also its widening circles of recommended practice across the chapters that move into consideration of the institutional and societal discourses that inform the teaching/learning culture in our public schools."
— Ruth Harman, University of Georgia, USA
"Meg Gebhard does a brilliant job of translating long histories of complex theories into digestible chunks to expand understandings about how language works, and how we can best support its development in school settings. Theoretical and practical aspects are closely entwined, and the information is incrementally layered for a final result that is both enlightening and easy to read. Each chapter ends with a praxis section that nicely supports practitioners into application. Through the theory, the praxis, and the technicalities of language – as well as the personal details in the case studies – Gebhard keeps this text deeply human, illuminating, and easy to connect to."
— Fernanda Kray, Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
"While we know that different content areas require the mastery of specialized terminology, Gebhard provides convincing evidence to show that it is as important to master their different grammars and genres. With the use of illustrative texts and clear explanations, she shows how teachers can use Halliday’s multi-functional grammar to give ELLs access to the language and literacies they need to succeed in content areas across the curriculum."
--Hilary Janks, Wits University, South Africa
"Every chapter in Gebhard's book includes a 'praxis' section, with suggestions for implementing Paolo Freire's (1993) call for reflection on the complexities of educational experiences and how these impact student learning and identities. These sections include topics for discussion as well as specific tasks that guide educators in thinking deeply about the issues raised. "
— Anne McCabe, Saint Louis University, Language, Context and Text
— Ruth Harman, University of Georgia, USA
"Meg Gebhard does a brilliant job of translating long histories of complex theories into digestible chunks to expand understandings about how language works, and how we can best support its development in school settings. Theoretical and practical aspects are closely entwined, and the information is incrementally layered for a final result that is both enlightening and easy to read. Each chapter ends with a praxis section that nicely supports practitioners into application. Through the theory, the praxis, and the technicalities of language – as well as the personal details in the case studies – Gebhard keeps this text deeply human, illuminating, and easy to connect to."
— Fernanda Kray, Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
"This book is a highly significant contribution to second language research, showing a deep respect for the needs and interests of multilingual learners, their teachers and language researchers. Informed by a critical perspective on systemic functional linguistics, Gebhard provides readers with a highly accessible and graduated introduction to SFL-informed literacy instruction and critical discourse analysis. What makes the work unique is its use of highly contextualized examples of teacher and student textual practices across the curriculum; and also its widening circles of recommended practice across the chapters that move into consideration of the institutional and societal discourses that inform the teaching/learning culture in our public schools."
— Ruth Harman, University of Georgia, USA
"Meg Gebhard does a brilliant job of translating long histories of complex theories into digestible chunks to expand understandings about how language works, and how we can best support its development in school settings. Theoretical and practical aspects are closely entwined, and the information is incrementally layered for a final result that is both enlightening and easy to read. Each chapter ends with a praxis section that nicely supports practitioners into application. Through the theory, the praxis, and the technicalities of language – as well as the personal details in the case studies – Gebhard keeps this text deeply human, illuminating, and easy to connect to."
— Fernanda Kray, Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
"While we know that different content areas require the mastery of specialized terminology, Gebhard provides convincing evidence to show that it is as important to master their different grammars and genres. With the use of illustrative texts and clear explanations, she shows how teachers can use Halliday’s multi-functional grammar to give ELLs access to the language and literacies they need to succeed in content areas across the curriculum."
--Hilary Janks, Wits University, South Africa
"Every chapter in Gebhard's book includes a 'praxis' section, with suggestions for implementing Paolo Freire's (1993) call for reflection on the complexities of educational experiences and how these impact student learning and identities. These sections include topics for discussion as well as specific tasks that guide educators in thinking deeply about the issues raised. "
— Anne McCabe, Saint Louis University, Language, Context and Text
Descriere
This critical perspective on literacy and schooling offers a conceptual framework to analyze how educational reforms have shaped the teaching and learning of language and disciplinary literacies in U.S. public schools.