
When it was first published, Teaching Students to Write earned a reputation for doing just that--helping instructors and prospective instructors teach their students how to write effectively. It was-and is-a student-centered, research-based text that combines scholarly theory with practical pedagogy to offer teachers a rich variety of strategies to meet their students' diverse needs.Extensively updated to reflect current research and theoretical scholarship, this revised edition is enhanced by in-depth discussions of collaborative learning and extensive exemplification of experiential or discovery learning. It now includes a full chapter on invention and prewriting heuristics, some important new approaches to teaching revision, a chapter devoted to designing effective assignments, and a chapter on teaching the rhetorical analysis that incorporates whole language pedagogical concepts and current literary theory. This text puts special emphasis on reaching gifted students and nonstandard-dialect speakers and suggests workable techniques for conducting conferences, responding to papers and assessing them fairly.The second edition is even richer in pedagogical apparatus for both writing teachers and their students-including duplicable Student Guidelines, Teaching Strategies sidebars, and chapter-ending questions that encourage discussion and essay-writing.
This text investigates the core question of how instructors can effectively teach writing by bridging the gap between scholarly theory and practical classroom application. Beth S. Neman, an expert in composition pedagogy, synthesizes research-based strategies to address the diverse needs of students in various learning environments. The book provides a comprehensive framework for writing instruction, emphasizing student-centered approaches that foster discovery and critical thinking. By integrating theoretical scholarship with actionable classroom techniques, the author offers a structured guide for both novice and experienced educators.
What You Will Find
Educators and writing instructors frequently cite this text as a foundational resource for its balance of theoretical depth and classroom-ready utility. Experts highlight the book's specific focus on inclusive teaching practices, such as supporting nonstandard-dialect speakers and gifted students, as a key strength of the second edition.
Page Count:
624
Publication Date:
1995-11-09
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195064283
ISBN-13:
9780195064285
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