Transforming Literacy Curriculum Genres: Working With Teacher Researchers in Urban Classrooms



Transforming Literacy Curriculum Genres: Working With Teacher Researchers in Urban Classrooms
This book is about a collaborative school-university action research project where university researchers and urban elementary teacher-researchers worked together to transform their teaching practices to better meet the needs of students from diverse backgrounds. The focus was on analyzing classroom discourse and developing more collaborative styles of teaching. The book is organized around differ... more details
Key Features:
  • Collaborative school-university action research project: The book focuses on a specific research project where university researchers and elementary teacher-researchers work together to improve their teaching practices.
  • Transformation of teaching practices: The main goal of the project is to transform teaching practices to better meet the needs of students from diverse backgrounds.
  • Analysis of classroom discourse: The book emphasizes the importance of analyzing classroom discourse and provides examples to illustrate the teachers' inquiries.


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Features
Format Softcover
ISBN 9780805824018
Publisher Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc
Manufacturer Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc
Description
This book is about a collaborative school-university action research project where university researchers and urban elementary teacher-researchers worked together to transform their teaching practices to better meet the needs of students from diverse backgrounds. The focus was on analyzing classroom discourse and developing more collaborative styles of teaching. The book is organized around different curriculum genres, such as writing and drama, and includes examples of classroom discourse to illustrate the teachers' inquiries. The first and last chapters, written by the editors, provide background information and explain the theoretical and methodological aspects of the project.

In this volume, university researchers and urban elementary teacher-researchers coauthor chapters on the teachers' year-long inquiries, on a range of literacy topics that they conducted as part of a collaborative school-university action research project. Central to this project was the teacher-researchers' attempts to transform their teaching practices to meet the needs of students from diverse ethnic and linguistic backgrounds, and their finding that their inquiry efforts resulted in developing more collaborative styles of teaching.

Because the everyday interactions between teachers and students are realized by the social talk in the classroom, the university- and teacher-researchers analyzed classroom discourse to study and document the teachers' efforts to make changes in the locus of power in literacy teaching and learning. The chapters include many classroom discourse examples to illustrate the critical points or incidents of these teachers' inquiries. They show the successes and the struggles involved in shedding teacher-controlled patterns of talk.

This book explores the process of urban teachers' journeys to create dialogically organized literacy instruction in particular literacy routines--called, in this book, curriculum genres. The book is organized in terms of these curriculum genres, such as writing curriculum genres, reading-aloud curriculum genres, drama curriculum genres, and so forth. Teacher inquiries were conducted in various elementary grade levels, from kindergarten through grade eight. Three occurred in bilingual classrooms and one in a special education classroom. The first and last chapters, written by the editors, provide the background, theoretical, and methodological underpinnings of the project.
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