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Kay M. Losey has written 3 work(s)
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Cover for 9780472035557 Cover for 9780805829556 Cover for 9781567502688 Cover for 9781567502695
An increasing number of students graduate from U.S. high schools and enter college while still in the process of learning English. This group--the "1.5 generation"--consisting of immigrants and U.S. residents born abroad as well as indigenous language minority groups, is rapidly becoming a major constituency in college writing programs. These students defy the existing categories in most college writing programs, and in the research literature. Experienced in American culture and schooling, they have characteristics and needs distinct from the international students who have been the subject of most research and literature on ESL writing. Furthermore, in studies of mainstream college composition, basic writing, and diversity, these students' status as second-language learners is usually left unaddressed or even misconstrued as underpreparation. Nevertheless, research and pedagogical writings have yet to take up the particular issues entailed in teaching composition to this student population. The intent in this volume is to bridge this gap and to initiate a dialogue on the linguistic, cultural, and ethical issues that attend teaching college writing to U.S.-educated linguistically diverse students. This book is the first to address explicitly issues in the instruction of "1.5 generation" college writers. From urban New York City to midwestern land grant universities to the Pacific Rim, experienced educators and researchers discuss a variety of contexts, populations, programs, and perspectives. The 12 chapters in this collection, authored by prominent authorities in non-native language writing, are research based and conceptual, providing a research-based survey of who the students are, their backgrounds and needs, and how they are placed and instructed in a variety of settings. The authors frame issues, raise questions, and provide portraits of language minority students and the classrooms and programs that serve them. Together, the pieces paint the landscape of college writing instruction for 1.5 generation students and explore the issues faced by ESL and college writing programs in providing appropriate writing instruction to second-language learners arriving from U.S. high schools. This book serves not only to articulate an issue and set an agenda for further research and discussion, but also to suggest paths toward linguistic and cultural sensitivity in any writing classroom. It is thought-provoking reading for college administrators, writing teachers, and scholars and students of first- and second-language composition.
By Linda Harklau (editor), Kay M. Losey (editor) and Meryl Siegal (editor)

Hardcover:

9780805829549 | Routledge, October 1, 1999, cover price $125.00

Paperback:

9780805829556 | Routledge, May 1, 1999, cover price $59.95

Miscellaneous:

9780585189819 | Routledge, June 12, 1999, cover price $57.95 | About this edition: An increasing number of students graduate from U.
9781410603371 | Routledge, June 12, 1999, cover price $48.95

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Product Description: This study of not only the silence, but the silencing of Mexican American Students in one California community college holds lessons for all educators-of all students at all levels. A profoundly important book.Courtney B. CazdenCharles William Eliot Professor of Education (Emerita), Harvard Graduate School of Education...read more

Hardcover:

9781567502688 | Praeger Pub Text, May 1, 1997, cover price $84.00 | About this edition: This study of not only the silence, but the silencing of Mexican American Students in one California community college holds lessons for all educators-of all students at all levels.

Paperback:

9781567502695 | Praeger Pub Text, September 1, 1996, cover price $49.95

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