Radical Departures: Composition and Progressive PedagogyThis book addresses some big questions: the current political climate, with its calls for standardized testing and accountability; the uneasy relationships between faculty in English and English education departments; and the (lack of) cooperation between postsecondary compositionists and P-12 language arts teachers. These issues are covered in the book as the ways are traced in which "progressive politics" of one kind or another have played an integral role in how writing has been taught and studied in United States secondary and postsecondary schools. The three chapters in Part I explore competing versions of "progressivism" in composition and rhetoric's past and present: the pedagogical and administrative progressivism of composition's early years (during the Progressive Era of the early 20th century); the recent "conservative restoration"; and contemporary critical pedagogy. Building on these discussions of progressivism, the three chapters in Part II work to reframe and reclaim Deweyan pedagogical progressivism for composition and rhetoric's future, showing how this strand of progressive thinking might help the field develop new, pedagogy-centered understandings and practices of disciplinarity, curriculum, and outreach. Woven in with the main chapters are "intraludes," narrative accounts of the author/educator's work as a writing teacher, scholar, and public school advocate. These narratives illustrate and connect the issues highlighted in each chapter, grounding them in the reality of everyday contexts. (Each chapter includes notes; contains an extensive list of works cited.) (NKA). |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 18
Page 138
... aims of our individual classrooms , as well as how these aims fit into the curricular goals as a whole . We each wrote about what we hoped students would leave our individual classes knowing or being able to do . Interestingly , when ...
... aims of our individual classrooms , as well as how these aims fit into the curricular goals as a whole . We each wrote about what we hoped students would leave our individual classes knowing or being able to do . Interestingly , when ...
Page 159
... the curriculum as we went along , remaking it semester by semester , week by week . It's not that we didn't have any educational principles or aims - it's that these principles and aims 159- Toward Pedagogy - Centered Curricula.
... the curriculum as we went along , remaking it semester by semester , week by week . It's not that we didn't have any educational principles or aims - it's that these principles and aims 159- Toward Pedagogy - Centered Curricula.
Page 160
... aims were viewed as in process , a site of negotiation among teachers and students . In fact , if anything , our evolving principles and aims were more influential in our teaching and our curricular decisions precisely because they were ...
... aims were viewed as in process , a site of negotiation among teachers and students . In fact , if anything , our evolving principles and aims were more influential in our teaching and our curricular decisions precisely because they were ...
Contents
Composition as a Progressive Enterprise | 10 |
The Conservative Restoration as Administrative | 40 |
Another Progressivism | 70 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
academic administrative aims American assessment become begin calls Chapter claims classroom committee Composition and Rhetoric compositionists consider construction continue conversation course critical pedagogy cultural curriculum departments develop Dewey disciplinary discipline discourse effect efficiency engage English English studies experience fact faculty field first-year function graduate high school hope ideas imagination important inquiry instance institutional intellectual interested Journal kind knowledge learning literacy look means ment move North offer organized participate perhaps political position possibilities practice present produce professional professors progressive progressivism questions readers reform response schools sequence shared social standardized story studies suggests talk teachers teachers and students teaching tell term tests texts tion traditional transformative turn understanding writing York