ABSTRACT

Negotiating Academic Literacies: Teaching and Learning Across Languages and Cultures is a cross-over volume in the literature between first and second language/literacy. This anthology of articles brings together different voices from a range of publications and fields and unites them in pursuit of an understanding of how academic ways of knowing are acquired. The editors preface the collection of readings with a conceptual framework that reconsiders the current debate about the nature of academic literacies. In this volume, the term academic literacies denotes multiple approaches to knowledge, including reading and writing critically.

College classrooms have become sites where a number of languages and cultures intersect. This is the case not only for students who are in the process of acquiring English, but for all learners who find themselves in an academic situation that exposes them to a new set of expectations. This book is a contribution to the effort to discover ways of supporting learning across languages and cultures--and to transform views about what it means to teach and learn, to read and write, and to think and know.

Unique to this volume is the inclusion of the perspectives of writers as well as those of teachers and researchers. Furthermore, the contributors reveal their own struggles and accomplishments as they themselves have attempted to negotiate academic literacies. The chronological ordering of articles provides a historical perspective, demonstrating ways in which issues related to teaching and learning across cultures have been addressed over time. The readings have consistency in terms of quality, depth, and passion; they raise important philosophical questions even as they consider practical classroom applications. The editors provide a series of questions that enable the reader to engage in a generative and exciting process of reflection and inquiry. This book is both a reference for teachers who work or plan to work with diverse learners, and a text for graduate-level courses, primarily in bilingual and ESL studies, composition studies, English education, and literacy studies.

chapter 1|7 pages

Diving in

An Introduction to Basic Writing

chapter 2|22 pages

The Language of Exclusion

Writing Instruction at the University

chapter 3|5 pages

A Journey into Speech

chapter 4|14 pages

Between Students' Language and Academic Discourse

Interlanguage as Middle Ground

chapter 5|9 pages

What is Literacy?

chapter 6|10 pages

From Outside, In

chapter 7|13 pages

From Silence to Words

Writing as Struggle

chapter 8|20 pages

Initiating ESL Students into the Academic Discourse Community

How Far Should We Go?

chapter 9|17 pages

A Common Ground

The Essay in the Academy

chapter 10|11 pages

The Classroom and the Wider Culture

Identity as a Key to Learning English Composition

chapter 11|10 pages

Evaluating Second Language Essays in Regular Composition Classes

Toward a Pluralistic U.S. Rhetoric

chapter 12|25 pages

Reflections on Academic Discourse

How it Relates to Freshmen and Colleagues

chapter 13|15 pages

Arts of the Contact Zone

chapter 14|11 pages

Questioning Academic Discourse

chapter 15|8 pages

Dancing With Professors

The Trouble With Academic Prose

chapter 17|17 pages

Discourse, Artifacts, and the Ozarks

Understanding Academic Literacy

chapter 18|12 pages

The Ownership of English

chapter 19|16 pages

Strangers in Academia

The Experiences of Faculty and ESL Students Across the Curriculum

chapter 20|28 pages

Borrowing Others' Words

Text, Ownership, Memory, and Plagiarism

chapter 22|9 pages

Blurred Voices

Who Speaks for the Subaltern?