Julie Nelson Christoph

4 articles
University of Wisconsin–Madison
  1. Each One Teach One
    Abstract

    Scholars of adult basic literacy curricular materials have argued that the skill-based, deficit-oriented approach of many such materials denies the interests and motivations of adult learners. Exploring why these kinds of curricular materials are prevalent in adult basic literacy education, this article focuses on the case of ProLiteracy, a nongovernmental adult basic literacy organization that grew out of missionary Frank Laubach's work in the 1930s to convert illiterate adults to Christianity and a belief in American-style capitalism. This article argues that the legacy of Laubach's evangelism continues to affect adult literacy instruction in the United States today, through the content of many of the materials in the ProLiteracy catalogue, as well as through the volunteer-based one-to-one tutoring model's positioning of low-literacy adults.

    doi:10.1177/0741088308327478
  2. Reconceiving Ethos in Relation to the Personal: Strategies of Placement in Pioneer Women's Writing
    doi:10.2307/3250770
  3. Reconceiving Ethos in Relation to the Personal: Strategies of Placement in Pioneer Women’s Writing
    Abstract

    Notes that educators must think about the possibilities for using autobiographical narrative ethically and effectively in academic writing and research, and they need to ask how the personal affects writing that is less personal. Considers how regardless of the stance toward the personal, no one can be an informed writer or reader without considering how subjectivity informs ways of knowing.

    doi:10.58680/ce20021268
  4. Taking Risks, Negotiating Relationships: One Teacher’s Transition toward a Dialogic Classroom
    Abstract

    This study investigated a low-achieving class that featured regular discussions to gain insight into how dialogically organized instruction emerged within the context of a traditional recitation instructional setting, further complicated by settings of poverty and linguistic diversity. Dialogic discourse can happen when teachers are adept at linking and at enabling links between academic objectives and student concerns.

    doi:10.58680/rte20011745