ABSTRACT

Taking as a starting point the most enduring insights to emerge from acclaimed researcher Arthur Applebee’s scholarship, this volume brings together leading experts to fully examine his work for its explanatory power and its potential to shape current and future research agendas. Focused on the ways in which students learn, schools teach, and assessors evaluate the forms and uses of language needed to flourish and grow, Applebee’s work reconceptualized how educators view language development and use in relation to schooling. Organized around three themes—Considering Curriculum as Conversation; Writing as a Tool for Learning; Talking it Out: Class Discussion and Literary Understanding—the 14 fascinating chapters in this book extend and challenge Applebee’s insights.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

Arthur N. Applebee: A Scholar's Life in Retrospect

section 1|64 pages

Considering Curriculum as Conversation

chapter 2|14 pages

Discussion, Conversation, and Dialogue

Applebee, Bakhtin, and Speech in School

chapter 3|16 pages

Entering the Conversation

Creating a Pathway to Academic Literacy

chapter 4|16 pages

A Curricular Conversation in Teacher Education

In the Domain of Dialogic Teaching 1

chapter 5|16 pages

Bringing Queer Students and Lgbt-Inclusive Literature into the Conversation

Lessons We've Learned from the Work of Arthur Applebee

section 2|66 pages

Writing as a Tool for Learning

chapter 6|16 pages

Writing the World to Build the World, Iteratively

Inscribing Data and Projecting New Materialities in an Engineering Design Project

chapter 7|16 pages

Nurturing Discursive Strengths

Efforts to Improve the Teaching of Reading and Writing in a Latino Charter School

chapter 8|15 pages

Reading the World as Text

Black Adolescents and Out-of-School Literacies

part 4|18 pages

Conclusion

chapter 14|14 pages

Practical Progressivism

W. Wilbur Hatfield, Deweyan Pedagogy, and the Future of English Teaching

chapter |2 pages

Contributors