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Know and Tell: A Writing Pedagogy of Disclosure, Genre, and Membership
Contributor(s): Bleich, David (Author)
ISBN: 086709446X     ISBN-13: 9780867094466
Publisher: Heinemann Educational Books
OUR PRICE:   $54.84  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: April 1998
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: "Know and Tell" is a sophisticated, richly knowledgeable, and far-reaching analysis of what it means to teach and learn language, what it means to engage with our subject as thinkers, doers, and social activists in the most profound sense of the word. The book is firmly centered in the English classroomon teacher practices, student responses, and the subject of English as it unfolds in everyday occurrencesoffering a clear vision of what teaching and learning language use is, can, might, and should be.

David Bleich asks hard questionsof himself, his students, his subject, and his colleagues. He reconnects our teaching practices with social needs, with what really matters in our societynamely how we can create selves that stand a chance of surviving school and beyond. His book addresses the teaching of writing from the standpoint of motivation, interest, and purpose of those in classrooms that depend on, need, and study writing. At the same time it shows that the details of language use in classrooms appear in language use in society.

"Know and Tell" enlarges the subject matter of "writing" from "general writing skills instruction" to language use as a feature of everyday life and as the main path for the announcement of knowledge. Bleich emphasizes that writing exists in living contexts and that even the most formal uses of writing need to be understood as aspects of living social scenes, interests, and groups of people. And in doing so, he also shows how postsecondary writing pedagogy can contribute to wider changes in academic teaching and can promote new levels of interdisciplinary cooperation.

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Language Arts & Disciplines | Study & Teaching
- Education | Higher
- Education | Teaching Methods & Materials - General
Dewey: 808.042
LCCN: 98012307
Series: Crosscurrents
Physical Information: (0.80 lbs) 248 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Know and Tell is a sophisticated, richly knowledgeable, and far-reaching analysis of what it means to teach and learn language, what it means to engage with our subject as thinkers, doers, and social activists in the most profound sense of the word. The book is firmly centered in the English classroom-on teacher practices, student responses, and the subject of English as it unfolds in everyday occurrences-offering a clear vision of what teaching and learning language use is, can, might, and should be.

David Bleich asks hard questions-of himself, his students, his subject, and his colleagues. He reconnects our teaching practices with social needs, with what really matters in our society-namely how we can create selves that stand a chance of surviving school and beyond. His book addresses the teaching of writing from the standpoint of motivation, interest, and purpose of those in classrooms that depend on, need, and study writing. At the same time it shows that the details of language use in classrooms appear in language use in society.

Know and Tell enlarges the subject matter of writing from general writing skills instruction to language use as a feature of everyday life and as the main path for the announcement of knowledge. Bleich emphasizes that writing exists in living contexts and that even the most formal uses of writing need to be understood as aspects of living social scenes, interests, and groups of people. And in doing so, he also shows how postsecondary writing pedagogy can contribute to wider changes in academic teaching and can promote new levels of interdisciplinary cooperation.


Contributor Bio(s): Bleich, David: - David Bleich teaches writing, teaching, language use, women's studies, Jewish studies, and science studies in the English department and in the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Rochester. Books of his germane to this topic are: Subjective Criticism (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1978) and The Double Perspective: Language, Literacy, and Social Relations (Oxford University Press, 1988). He also coedited (with Sally Reagan Ebest and Thomas Fox) Writing With: New Directions in Collaborative Teaching, Learning, and Research (SUNY Press, 1994).