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Online Writing Conference: A Guide for Teachers and Tutors [Pehme köide]

Foreword by , (University of Maryland University College, USA)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x11 mm, kaal: 286 g, Figures
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Feb-2010
  • Kirjastus: Heinemann Educational Books
  • ISBN-10: 0867096012
  • ISBN-13: 9780867096019
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x11 mm, kaal: 286 g, Figures
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Feb-2010
  • Kirjastus: Heinemann Educational Books
  • ISBN-10: 0867096012
  • ISBN-13: 9780867096019
Teised raamatud teemal:

Nominated for the International Writing Centers Association (IWCA) Outstanding Book award.

The Online Writing Conference: A Guide for Teachers and Tutors, is exactly the book that I-and others-have been waiting for. Beth Hewett manages in this brief volume to answer a carload of my questions and alleviate an equal number of my fears.

--Michael A. Pemberton
Professor and Director of University Writing Center
Georgia Southern University

Composition is going digital. The number of online writing courses in colleges across the country is increasing each year. How do we best teach writing over the Internet? How must our pedagogy change? Beth Hewett provides real and practical answers.

After years of online teaching and tutoring, Hewett shares her trade secrets and best practices. Grounded in current theory and research, her approach centers on building relationships, solving problems, and working efficiently. The book's problem-centered instruction uses mini-lessons and clear directions so that teachers and tutors can guide students toward improved writing.

Hewett covers a range of core issues, including:

  • building trust
  • assessing students' needs
  • creating effective mini-lessons
  • crafting helpful instructional messages
  • formatting comments and modeling key strategies
  • using time wisely.

The Online Writing Conference also provides a wealth of:

  • actual one-to-one examples of online conferencing
  • tutorial transcripts
  • action plans for teachers and tutors.

Whether new or experienced, whether a teacher, tutor, writing program administrator, or writing center director, you will want this book at your side when your computer screen becomes your classroom.

Foreword ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction xv
Benefits of Online Teacher/Tutor Conferencing
1(13)
What an Online Conference Is
1(1)
Who Conferences Online and Why
2(8)
When and Why Conferencing Online Helps
10(1)
Why Conferencing Online Is Hard to Do Well
11(3)
Practical Matters
14(23)
The Nature of the Writing Conference
14(2)
Writing Conference Characteristics
16(14)
Identify the Strengths of the Tools
30(7)
Establishing Trust
37(34)
Creating the Learning Environment
37(10)
Setting Instructional Expectations
47(3)
Helping Students to set Agendas and Make Choices
50(6)
Connecting with Students
56(3)
Caring for Students
59(5)
Letting Students Care for Us
64(7)
Theories For Writing Response in Online Settings
71(11)
Responding to Writing
71(1)
Expressivism and OWI
72(2)
Social Construction and OWI
74(2)
Postprocess and OWI
76(2)
Eclectic Approaches and OWI
78(4)
First Steps For Writing Response in Online Settings
82(20)
Know What You Are Talking About
82(4)
Use Vocabulary Specific to Writing Instruction
86(2)
Write at the Student's Level
88(3)
Choose Desired Outcomes
91(6)
Writing Mini-lessons and Next Steps
97(5)
The Orneriness of Language
102(18)
What Students Say They Need in Conference-based Commentary
102(4)
Direct and Indirect Speech
106(6)
``I've Got a Secre'' (Direct and Indirect Commentary)
112(8)
Using What Works
120(25)
Engagement
120(5)
Where to Comment
125(8)
Too Much and Too Little Commenting
133(4)
Modeling by Proofing and Editing
137(2)
Addressing Sensitive Issues
139(6)
Having Effective Conferences
145(14)
Learning from Student Progress
145(1)
Instructional Rubics
145(4)
Interactive Journals
149(2)
Spontaneous or Scheduled Chats
151(1)
Midterm and End-of-Term Surveys
152(4)
Self-Audits
156(3)
Postscript: Toward A Theory of Conference-Based Instruction 159(4)
Appendix 1: A Study of Online Writing Instructor Perceptions 163(9)
Appendix 2: Direct and Indirect Speech in Writing Response 172(9)
Works Cited 181