Eleanor Kutz

5 articles
  1. The Discovery of Competence: Teaching and Learning with Diverse Student Writers
    Abstract

    Discovery of Competence shows how the writing classroom can be reconceived as an environment for collaborative inquiry by students and teachers. It presents new ways of thinking about program design, redefines the nature of writing assessment, and offers alternative conceptions of multicultural curriculums. Drawing on students' writing and research, it suggests how teachers can recognize their students' competence and help them build on it systematically. While the book speaks to all teachers of writing, it will be of considerable interest to those who work with diverse student populations, including ESL students. The authors make it clear that the writing classroom is a place where both students and their teachers may build on their competence and realize their possibilities as writers and learners.

    doi:10.2307/358807
  2. Critical Literacy, Critical Pedagogy
    doi:10.2307/378317
  3. An Unquiet Pedagogy: Transforming Practice in the English Classroom
    Abstract

    An Unquiet Pedagogy argues for a new approach to teaching English in the high school and college classroom, one that reconceives the relationship of literacy and the learner. The title is taken from an essay by Paulo Freire in his book with Donaldo Macedo entitled Literacy: Reading the Word and the World. Like Freire, the authors believe that pedagogy must be critical -- that it must examine the assumptions that teachers and students bring to any educational enterprise, that it must take into account the contexts of learners' lives, and that it must question, rather than quietly accept, existing practices. Voices of beginning and experienced teachers are heard often in the book, exploring how such an unquiet pedagogy might come to be. The authors examine the experiences of these teachers, as well as their own, showing how the classroom can become a place of inquiry for both teachers and students and how theory and research that provide an integrated perspective on language, literacy, and culture must inform teaching practice. Their aim is to transform the English classroom into a place where the imagination becomes central and where learners construct knowledge in the development of real literacy.

    doi:10.2307/358394
  4. Between Students' Language and Academic Discourse: Interlanguage as Middle Ground
    doi:10.2307/377266
  5. Between Students’ Language and Academic Discourse: Interlanguage as Middle Ground
    Abstract

    Preview this article: Between Students' Language and Academic Discourse: Interlanguage as Middle Ground, Page 1 of 1 < Previous page | Next page > /docserver/preview/fulltext/ce/48/4/collegeenglish11609-1.gif

    doi:10.58680/ce198611609