Teaching Literature as Reflective PracticeTeaching Literature as Reflective Practice speaks to all those teachers who teach the "gen ed" literature course that their students must take to complete a general education or core curriculum requirement. These students--the 95 percent who are not English majors--are the students we hope will become active and reflective members of a reading public. Given this goal, Kathleen Blake Yancey outlines a course located in reflective practice and connected to readings in the world. The course invites students to theorize--about their own reading practices, about how literature is made, and about texts and their relationships to culture more generally. Such a course also encourages students to think about what places and occasions in the world are poetic, about the role of not-understanding in coming to understand literature, and about technological forms of literacy, such as multimedia pop-ups that link associatively to multiple contexts. In addition to cogent reflections on the realities of lived, delivered, and experienced curricula, Yancey defines, illustrates, and analyzes two kinds of literature portfolio--print and electronic--and shows how each fosters a particular kind of learning and leads to specific assessment practices. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 18
Page
... constructed the task ( and why I construct it as I do ) , what happened in the process , and what this means for 95 percent of postsecondary students - that is , for our stu- dents who do not major in English , but who represent our ...
... constructed the task ( and why I construct it as I do ) , what happened in the process , and what this means for 95 percent of postsecondary students - that is , for our stu- dents who do not major in English , but who represent our ...
Page 58
... construct in the context of both the lived curriculum they bring with them and the delivered curriculum we seek to share . Given the nature of reading as a constructive act , students will It [ a poem ] is not an object or an ideal ...
... construct in the context of both the lived curriculum they bring with them and the delivered curriculum we seek to share . Given the nature of reading as a constructive act , students will It [ a poem ] is not an object or an ideal ...
Page 100
... constructed - differently from one student to the next . What I had sensed intuitively - that there was an experienced ... construct ; the lived curriculum that contextualized both . Reflection - which we currently see in Stephen ...
... constructed - differently from one student to the next . What I had sensed intuitively - that there was an experienced ... construct ; the lived curriculum that contextualized both . Reflection - which we currently see in Stephen ...
Contents
The Lived Curriculum 20 285 | 16 |
The Delivered Curriculum | 41 |
Closing the Circle | 58 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activity Annabel Lee ask students assignment begin Billy Collins classroom connections context create culture curricula delivered curriculum dents develop digital portfolios Donald Schön E.E. Cummings Edith Wharton education literature engage English erature essays experience experienced curriculum explain Figure genre Guggenheim Museum Bilbao help students high school House of Mirth images intellectual interpretation invisibility James Paul Gee Jerome McGann Kathleen kind Last accessed learning litera literary literature class literature course lived curriculum McGann means mother-in-law movie multiple stories not-understanding novel Octopus palimpsest palimtext pedagogy performance play poetry Pop-Up Video pop-ups practice print portfolio questions READ THE POEM reader of literature reader's block reader's theater reading process RealPlayer reflection Robert Scholes role says Scholes seems specific talk teachers Teaching Literature tell term theme thought tion ture understand University visual Wallace Stevens words writing Yancey