ABSTRACT

Designed for courses on theories and methods of teaching college writing, this text is distinguished by its emphasis on giving teachers a foundation of knowledge for teaching writing to a diverse student body. As such, it is equally relevant for teacher training in basic writing, ESL, and first year composition, the premise being that in most colleges and universities today teachers of each of these types of courses encounter similar student populations and teaching challenges. Many instructors compile packets of articles for this course because they cannot find an appropriate collection in one volume. This text fills that gap. It includes in one volume:

*the latest thinking about teaching and tutoring basic writing, ESL, and first year composition students;
*seminal articles, carefully selected to be accessible to those new to the field, by classic authors in the field of composition and ESL, as well as a number of new voices;
*attention to both theory and practice, but with an emphasis on practice; and
*articles about non-traditional students, multiculturalism, and writing across the disciplines.

The text includes suggestions for pedagogy and invitations for exploration to engage readers in reflection and in applications to their own teaching practice.

part I|134 pages

Teaching Writing

chapter 1|19 pages

Reclaiming the Classroom

chapter 2|23 pages

Teaching Basic Writing

An Alternative to Basic Skills

chapter 3|10 pages

The First Day of Class

Passing the Test

chapter 5|21 pages

From “Let's Flip the Script

An African American Discourse on Language, Literature, and Learning”

chapter 6|10 pages

Pedagogy of the Distressed

chapter 7|20 pages

Pomo Blues

Stories from First-Year Composition

part II|107 pages

Becoming a Writer

chapter 8|16 pages

The Process of Writing—Growing

chapter 10|13 pages

From Silence to Words

Writing as Struggle

chapter 11|12 pages

Listening for Difference

chapter 12|13 pages

ESL Tutors

Islands of Calm in the Multicultural Storm

chapter 13|19 pages

Writing Alive

chapter 14|9 pages

Toward a Post-Process Composition

Abandoning the Rhetoric of Assertion

part III|96 pages

Responding to Writing

chapter 15|19 pages

Responding to Texts

Facilitating Revision in the Writing Workshop

chapter 16|8 pages

The Listening Eye

Reflections on the Writing Conference

chapter 17|9 pages

Errors

Windows into the Mind

chapter 19|12 pages

The Myths of Assessment

chapter 20|11 pages

Evaluating ESL Writing

chapter 21|16 pages

Fault Lines in the Contact Zone

part IV|132 pages

Beyond the Writing Classroom

chapter 23|17 pages

Strangers in Academia

The Experiences of Faculty and ESL Students Across the Curriculum

chapter 24|9 pages

Opinion

The Wyoming Conference Resolution Opposing Unfair Salaries and Working Conditions for Post-Secondary Teachers of Writing

chapter 25|21 pages

Distant Voices

Teaching and Writing in a Culture of Technology

chapter 26|23 pages

Basic Writing

Curricular Interactions with New Technology

chapter 28|24 pages

Places to Stand

The Reflective Writer-Teacher-Writer in Composition