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result(s) for
"English language Rhetoric Study and teaching"
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International Students' Multilingual Literacy Practices
by
De Costa, Peter I
in
Bilingualism & multilingualism
,
Case studies lcgft
,
EDUCATION / Adult & Continuing Education
2022
This book presents the results of research that focused on international students receiving writing instruction on a US university campus. It explores how the students developed their foreign-student identities and their own ways of grappling with the unique issues they encountered as they worked to improve their academic literacy skills.
Approaching Language Transfer through Text Classification
by
Jarvis, Scott
,
Crossley, Scott A
in
computer classifiers to detect language background
,
crosslinguistic influence
,
crosslinguistic influence in SLA
2012
This book explains the detection-based approach to investigating crosslinguistic influence and illustrates the value of the approach through a collection of five empirical studies that use the approach to quantify, evaluate, and isolate the subtle and complex influences of learners' native-language backgrounds on their English writing.
Crossing Borders, Writing Texts, Being Evaluated
by
Golden, Anne
,
Kulbrandstad, Lars Anders
,
Zhang, Lawrence Jun
in
Academic writing
,
Academic writing -- Study and teaching
,
Academic writing -- Study and teaching -- Congresses
2021
This book provides critical perspectives on issues relating to
writing norms and assessment, as well as writing proficiency
development, and suggests that scholars need to both carefully
examine testing regimes and develop research-informed perspectives
on tests and testing practices. In this way schools, institutions
of adult education and universities can better prepare learners
with differing cultural experiences to meet the challenges. The
book brings together empirical studies from diverse geographical
contexts to address the crossing of literacy borders, with a focus
on academic genres and practices. Most of the studies examine
writing in countries where the norms and expectations are
different, but some focus on writing in a new discourse community
set in a new discipline. The chapters shed light on commonalities
and differences between these two situations with respect to the
expectations and evaluations facing the writers. They also consider
the extent to which the norms that the writers bring with them from
their educational backgrounds and own cultures are compromised in
order to succeed in the new educational settings.
National Healing
2013,2012
InNational Healing, author Claude Hurlbert persuasively relates nationalism to institutional racism and contends that these are both symptoms of a national ill health afflicting American higher education and found even in the field of writing studies. Teachers and scholars, even in progressive fields like composition, are unwittingly at odds with their own most liberatory purposes, he says, and he advocates consciously broadening our understanding of rhetoric and writing instruction to include rhetorical traditions of non-Western cultures.Threading a personal narrative of his own experiences as a student, professor, and citizen through a wide ranging discussion of theory, pedagogy, and philosophy in the writing classroom, Hurlbert weaves a vision that moves beyond simple polemic and simplistic multiculturalism.National Healingoffers a compelling new aesthetic, epistemological, and rhetorical configuration.
Goals for academic writing : ESL students and their instructors
by
Cumming, Alister H.
in
Academic writing
,
Academic writing -- Study and teaching -- Canada
,
Applied linguistics
2006,2008
This book documents the results of a multi-year project that investigated the goals for writing improvement among 45 students and their instructors in intensive courses of English as a Second Language (ESL) then, a year later, in academic programs at two Canadian universities. The researchers present a detailed framework to describe these goals from the perspectives of the students as well as their instructors. The goals are analyzed for groups of students from particular backgrounds internationally, for changes over time, and in relation to the ESL and academic courses. The authors use activity theory, goal theory, various sociolinguistic concepts, and multiple data sources (interviews, observations, stimulated recalls, questionnaires, and text analyses) to provide a contextually-grounded perspective on learning, teaching, writing, second-language development, and curriculum policy. The book will interest researchers, educators, and administrators of ESL, university, college, and literacy programs around the world.