Professing and Pedagogy: Learning the Teaching of English |
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Page 29
For instance , when TAs are allowed to teach courses outside of firstyear writing ,
it is usually after having made significant scholarly progress ( i . e . , reaching
upper - level coursework in literature ) . This teaching is not typically formally ...
For instance , when TAs are allowed to teach courses outside of firstyear writing ,
it is usually after having made significant scholarly progress ( i . e . , reaching
upper - level coursework in literature ) . This teaching is not typically formally ...
Page 85
It came , in other words , through ongoing dialogue with this moment , which
allowed me to see myself as student through a new lens . At the time , I
understood the gap between what was “ supposed ” to happen and what I was
experiencing to ...
It came , in other words , through ongoing dialogue with this moment , which
allowed me to see myself as student through a new lens . At the time , I
understood the gap between what was “ supposed ” to happen and what I was
experiencing to ...
Page 90
Her disruption opened a space in the conversation which allowed for an
examination of the levels of performance expected in the course , and how the
Storyspace served as a means to “ display ” the work we ' d done rather than to
share and ...
Her disruption opened a space in the conversation which allowed for an
examination of the levels of performance expected in the course , and how the
Storyspace served as a means to “ display ” the work we ' d done rather than to
share and ...
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Contents
Teaching in the Research Model | 1 |
The Teacher as Scholar | 33 |
The Teacher as Trainee | 63 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activity allowed approach argue assumptions authority become begin body calls challenge chapter classroom College composition conception consider contexts conversation course create critical critical pedagogy cultural curricular curriculum demonstrate describes designed dialogue disciplinary discipline discussion doctoral enable enact engage English studies examine examples experience fact faculty field finally first-year function goals graduate ideas important individual inquiry instance institutional intellectual interest invite issues kind knowledge learner learning look master means move narratives notion offer one's ongoing opportunities participate pedagogy portfolio position possibilities practices preparation present production professional professor programs promote questions reflection remains requires response result revision rhetoric role scholar scholarly scholarship seemed serve shared silence speak specific stories suggest teacher teaching texts theory tion traditional understand values visions visits writing