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  • Teaching Writing in the Caribbean: Culturally Responsive Practice and Research for Educators

    Teaching Writing in the Caribbean by Robinson, Sandra; Simpson, Victor C.; Seunarinesingh, Krishna;

    Culturally Responsive Practice and Research for Educators

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    Rövid leírás:

    This book provides pre-service Caribbean teachers and educators with ways of thinking about writing instruction to improve their students’ writing proficiency. It engages with the post-colonial context of Caribbean language teaching to offer a pedagogical methodology that is distinctive in its approach within the Caribbean and its diaspora.

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    Hosszú leírás:

    This book provides pre-service Caribbean teachers and educators with contextually tested, robust strategies and ways of thinking about writing instruction which will improve their students’ writing proficiency. It engages with the post-colonial context of Caribbean language teaching to offer a pedagogical methodology that is distinctive in its approach to the teaching of writing within the Caribbean and its diaspora.


    It offers a wealth of examples, strategies, activities and tasks that are culturally sensitive to support the practice of writing educators in secondary and post-secondary institutions, teacher educators involved in teacher preparation, students studying at the university level in the Caribbean, as well as practitioners and researchers in the practice of Caribbean approaches to the teaching of writing to students within the diaspora. Written by experts and practitioners whose content and pedagogical experience with writing instruction spans primary, secondary and tertiary level classrooms, the 14 chapters are underpinned by evidence-informed practice. The text includes authentic classroom examples as well as templates and tools for educators.


    This is a key resource for Caribbean educators teaching writing across all levels, pre-service teachers and teacher educators in the Caribbean, as well as researchers and scholars in language and literacy education.



    'Teaching writing in the Caribbean: Culturally responsive practice and research for educators is a fresh, direct and enthusiastic guide for teachers of writing in the Caribbean. It has been prepared by more than a dozen, well-qualified Caribbean nationals with experience and expertise in teaching as well as in writing. It encourages personal planning, training, research, flexibility and focus on the learner in the preparation of teachers of writing. It should be a compulsory textbook in courses aimed at converting students into sensitive and sensible teachers of writing.'


    Peter A. RobertsProfessor Emeritus The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados and former Chief Examiner for CSEC English 'A'.


     


    '[T] he teacher is also foregrounded and treated in a professional, collegial and developmental way. As we move through the book, the teacher-reader is constantly being asked to reflect on the information, the applications and the research – to integrate the ideas into her own practice and monitor her own development through continuing research and professional learning communities. In fact, the number of articles and myriad voices in this collection models a kind of community in itself.


    The core of the book is learner-centred with its concern for honouring the language background of the students by its use of culturally relevant examples that draw on authentic classroom interaction, and artefacts, while also referencing Caribbean curricula and literature. The title itself makes clear that focus on the ‘particular’


    As important as cultural responsiveness, is the essential principle of planning, which is foundational to language teaching, especially second language teaching.  This is underscored in the chapters that focus on ‘design’: the work can be naturalistic and authentic but must also be intentional in its rigorous implementation. Several of the chapters foreground planning in its widest sense – taking account of external factors whether it is the contextual elements of classroom ecology; or the necessary systematic planning embedded in a specific writing task. Or, broader still, the meticulous work of lesson and unit planning.'


    Beverley Bryan, Retired Professor of Language Education from The University of the West Indies, Mona Campus, Jamaica

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    Foreword – Beverley Bryan


    Preface


    Introduction –Teaching Writing as Necessity and Skill


    Sandra Robinson, Victor Simpson and Krishna Seunarinesingh


     


    Framing a Perspective of Writing with Teachers in Mind


    Chapter 1


    Writing Teachers: Transforming the Knowledge of Writing into the Teaching of Writing Sandra Robinson, Victor Simpson and Krishna Seunarinesingh


     


     


    Chapter 2


    Becoming A Strategic Writing Teacher Krishna Seunarinesingh


     


    Chapter 3


    Establishing a Context for Writing – Adeola Matthew


    Chapter 4


    Theoretical and Pedagogical Foundations of Teaching Writing Sandra Robinson


     


    Constructing Writing through Research, Planning and Use of Technology


     


      Chapter 5:


      Perspectives on Writing Research – Marise Butler


     


    Chapter 6


    Technology and Writing in the English Classroom –Judith Hatt and Krishna Seunarinesingh


     


    Chapter 7


    Designing Writing for Teaching: Principles and Practices – Angelina Polius


     


    Chapter 8


    Planning for Writing – Using the Unit and Lesson to Shape Writing Instruction –Desryn Collins


     


    Building the Structure and Content of Writing


    Chapter 9


    Instruction in Critical Writing Elements Victor Simpson


     


    Chapter 10


    Enabling Student Writing through Note Taking – Kelvin Quintyne


     


    Chapter 11


    Improving Writing Skills – The Mechanics Janice Jules and Korah Belgrave


     


    Chapter 12


    Responding to Student Writing – Lynette Tyson-Noel


     


     


    Supporting Students’ Writing Experience Through Practice: Strategies and Activities


     


    Chapter 13


    Writing Strategies that Work – Karen Thomas and Yvonne Alexis-Jones


     


    Chapter 14


    Writing in Response to Literature Karen Thomas and Sharon Philip with Andrea Keizer-Bowman


     


    Chapter 15


    Teaching Writing Across the Curriculum – Janice Jules, Bernisa Roberts, Lydia Quinn and Gillian Fleary-Lazarus with Veronica Simon


     


    Chapter 16


    An Afterword: Teaching Writing for Now and Beyond


     


    Index


    Appendices



    • Helpful resources

    • Some strategies that work

    • Useful websites


    Templates


    Resources

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