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E-raamat: Teaching Writing through the Immigrant Story

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Dec-2021
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Colorado
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781646421664
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Dec-2021
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Colorado
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781646421664

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"Explores the intersection between immigration and pedagogy via the narrative. Embedded in the contexts both of student writing and student reading of literature, scholars engage the topic of immigration within writing and literature courses for extending, critiquing, and challenging assumptions about justice and equity, and deepening students' sense of ethics and humanity"--

Teaching Writing through the Immigrant Story explores the intersection between immigration and pedagogy via the narrative form. Embedded in the contexts of both student writing and student reading of literature chapters by scholars from four-year and two-year colleges and universities across the country, this book engages the topic of immigration within writing and literature courses as the site for extending, critiquing, and challenging assumptions about justice and equity while deepening students’ sense of ethics and humanity.
 
Each of the chapters recognizes the prevalence of immigrant students in writing classrooms across the United States—including foreign-born, first- and second-generation Americans, and more—and the myriad opportunities and challenges those students present to their instructors. These contributors have seen the validity in the stories and experiences these students bring to the classroom—evidence of their lifetimes of complex learning in both academic and nonacademic settings. Like thousands of college-level instructors in the United States, they have immigrant stories of their own. The immigrant “narrative” offers a unique framework for knowledge production in which students and teachers may learn from each other, in which the ordinary power dynamic of teacher and students begins to shift, to enable empathy to emerge and to provide space for an authentic kind of pedagogy.
 
By engaging writing and literature teachers within and outside the classroom, Teaching Writing through the Immigrant Story speaks to the immigrant narrative as a viable frame for teaching writing—an opportunity for building and articulating knowledge through academic discourse. The book creates a platform for immigration as a writing and literary theme, a framework for critical thinking, and a foundation for significant social change and advocacy.
 
Contributors: Tuli Chatterji, Katie Daily, Libby Garland, Silvia Giagnoni, Sibylle Gruber, John Havard, Timothy Henderson, Brennan Herring, Lilian Mina, Rachel Pate, Emily Schnee, Elizabeth Stone
 
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: Teaching Writing through Immigrant Stories 3(10)
Heather Ostman
Howard Tinberg
Danizete Martinez
Part
1. Situating The Discussion
1 I am an Immigrant: Cultural Multiplicities in US Educational Systems
13(23)
Sibylle Gruber
2 My Italian Grandmother, the Enemy Alien: Bringing Her Story and Others into My Classroom in an Age of Nativism
36(10)
Elizabeth Stone
3 Immigrant Stories from the Deep South: Stories of Bias, Discrimination, and Hope
46(17)
Lilian W. Mina
Brittany Armstrong
Venijah Bellamy
Paul Frick
Part
2. Teaching Through The Stories
4 Reorienting via Triad: From Animals, Rapists, and Gang Members to Living, Breathing, Human Beings
63(13)
Katie Daily
5 Initiating a Globally Inclusive Undergraduate Curriculum through Luis Valdez's Chicano/a Protest Theater
76(15)
Danizete Martinez
6 Narratives and Counternarratives: Contextualizing Immigrant Voice
91(23)
Tuli Chatterji
7 Classrooms Filled with Stories: Writing Immigrant Narratives in the Age of Trump
114(20)
Libby Garland
Emily Schnee
8 Teaching Immigration in a Writing-Intensive Honors Course
134(23)
John C. Havard
Silvia Giagnoni
Timothy J. Henderson
Brennan Herring
Rachel Pate
9 Reflective Practice, Immigrant Narrative, and the Humanities Institute
157(14)
Heather Ostman
Index 171(2)
About the Authors 173