Professing and Pedagogy: Learning the Teaching of English |
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Page 47
We might consider , then , what is lost by the approaches described above . What
does it mean , for instance , to measure student success by GPA ? While Osborne
sets out to prove that critical thinking can be taught ( using the cognitive levels ...
We might consider , then , what is lost by the approaches described above . What
does it mean , for instance , to measure student success by GPA ? While Osborne
sets out to prove that critical thinking can be taught ( using the cognitive levels ...
Page 55
For instance , students might be invited to visit the classrooms of other teachers
— and to engage in dialogue with them — in order to consider the pedagogical
assumptions and values present , the relationship between aims and enactments
...
For instance , students might be invited to visit the classrooms of other teachers
— and to engage in dialogue with them — in order to consider the pedagogical
assumptions and values present , the relationship between aims and enactments
...
Page 90
While it ' s interesting to consider what allowed for this interruption — perhaps
including the post - course conversations and the attentive audience of mainly
female teachers — it is also necessary to consider what might have facilitated
such ...
While it ' s interesting to consider what allowed for this interruption — perhaps
including the post - course conversations and the attentive audience of mainly
female teachers — it is also necessary to consider what might have facilitated
such ...
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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
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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