International Perspectives on English Teacher Development
From Initial Teacher Education to Highly Accomplished Professional
Herausgeber: Goodwyn, Andrew; Zancanella, Don; Durrant, Cal; Sawyer, Wayne; Scherff, Lisa; Roberts, Rachel; Manuel, Jacqueline
International Perspectives on English Teacher Development
From Initial Teacher Education to Highly Accomplished Professional
Herausgeber: Goodwyn, Andrew; Zancanella, Don; Durrant, Cal; Sawyer, Wayne; Scherff, Lisa; Roberts, Rachel; Manuel, Jacqueline
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The fourth volume in the successful IFTE series provides an international perspective on the knowledge and professional development of the English teaching workforce. It provides a state-of-the-art review of English teaching and teachers and how they are developed over time.
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The fourth volume in the successful IFTE series provides an international perspective on the knowledge and professional development of the English teaching workforce. It provides a state-of-the-art review of English teaching and teachers and how they are developed over time.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. November 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 644g
- ISBN-13: 9780367766900
- ISBN-10: 0367766906
- Artikelnr.: 64668292
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. November 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 644g
- ISBN-13: 9780367766900
- ISBN-10: 0367766906
- Artikelnr.: 64668292
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Andrew Goodwyn is the President of The International Federation for the Teaching of English and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. He is also a Professor and a Head of The School of Education and English Language and a Director of The Institute for Research in Education at The University of Bedfordshire, UK. Jacqueline Manuel is a Professor of English Education in the Sydney School of Education and Social Work at the University of Sydney, Australia. Rachel Roberts is the subject lead for the Secondary English PGCE. Lisa Scherff teaches English and AP Research at South Fort Myers High School in Florida, USA. Wayne Sawyer is an Emeritus Professor in the School of Education at Western Sydney University, Australia. Cal Durrant is the Secretary of IFTE (International Federation for the Teaching of English). Don Zancanella is an Emeritus Professor in the College of Education and the Department of Language, Literacy, and Sociocultural Studies at the University of New Mexico, USA.
Introduction: The remarkable careers of English teachers
Andrew Goodwyn
SECTION 1 WHAT MAKES AN ENGLISH TEACHER
Chapter 1: 'I can't imagine a better profession': Factors influencing the
decision to teach English
Jacqueline Manuel and Janet Dutton
Chapter 2: Literature, university education and the making of English
teachers
Wayne Sawyer, Larissa McLean Davies and Philip Mead
Chapter 3: English Teachers as Readers: Identity and Knowledge
Matthew Sroka, Judith Franzak and Don Zancanella
Chapter 4: Stylistics as pedagogy: the value of literary linguistics for
the secondary literature classroom
Marcello Giovanelli
Chapter 5: Becoming an English teacher: An Arts-informed and inquiry-based
model of Initial Teacher Education
Janet Dutton and Jackie Manuel
SECTION 2 INITIAL TEACHER EDUCATION
Chapter 6: A critical overview of ITE in England
Rachel Roberts
Chapter 7: On mirages and monsters: English Language Arts for the untimely
Dennis Sumara and Rebecca Luce-Kapler
Chapter 8: Developing English teachers in New Zealand: The battle for
professional knowledge
Terry Locke
Chapter 9: Balancing intervention and agency: Reform agendas and
innovations in Initial Teacher Education in Australia
Wayne Sawyer, Jacqueline Manuel and Cal Durrant
Chapter 10: The Complex Enterprise of US Secondary English Teacher
Education
Marshall A. George, Melanie Shoffner and Lisa Scherff
Chapter 11: Blending the old with the new: Year-long Secondary English
internships in Western Australia
Cal Durrant and Susan Ledger
Chapter 12: Disruptive synergy: Reframing the policy-practice discourse to
transform teacher education
Tiffany Karalis Noel, Amanda Winkelsas and Julie Gorlewski
SECTION 3 LIFE AS AN ENGLISH TEACHER
Chapter 13: A praxis of pre-service English teacher writing: Walter
Benjamin and 'operating writers' in an age of standardisation
Graham Parr, Scott Bulfin and Fleur Diamond
Chapter 14: Sustaining professional learning for sustainable rural
contexts: The power of the National Writing project in developing adaptive
expertise
James E. Fredricksen and Tanya Baker
Chapter 15: An activist democratic model of teacher professional learning:
The Teaching and Learning Caskets Imaginarium
Jacqueline Manuel, Claire Hansen and Liam E. Semler
Chapter 16: Developing teachers' writing lives: A case study of English
teacher professional learning
Don Carter and Joanne Yoo
Chapter 17: The fate of critical literacy in an age of standards-based
hegemonies: The New Zealand context
Susan Sandretto, Derek Shafer and Terry Locke
SECTION 4 GREAT TEACHERS OF ENGLISH
Chapter 18: The attrition of the expertise of teachers of English: From the
rich pedagogy of personal and social agency to the poverty of the powerful
knowledge heritage model
Andrew Goodwyn
Chapter 19: Expert English teachers as/in groups
Wayne Sawyer
Chapter 20: Long time becoming: The role of cultural memory and
professional learning in sustaining English teaching
Fleur Diamond, Scott Bulfin and Graham Parr
Chapter 21: Teachers of writing also write: Insights from the Toronto
Writing Project
Ben Gallagher, Ashleigh A. Allen and Rob Simon
Chapter 22: The courage to teach today: What do teachers need?
Ken Lindblom and Leila Christenbury
Andrew Goodwyn
SECTION 1 WHAT MAKES AN ENGLISH TEACHER
Chapter 1: 'I can't imagine a better profession': Factors influencing the
decision to teach English
Jacqueline Manuel and Janet Dutton
Chapter 2: Literature, university education and the making of English
teachers
Wayne Sawyer, Larissa McLean Davies and Philip Mead
Chapter 3: English Teachers as Readers: Identity and Knowledge
Matthew Sroka, Judith Franzak and Don Zancanella
Chapter 4: Stylistics as pedagogy: the value of literary linguistics for
the secondary literature classroom
Marcello Giovanelli
Chapter 5: Becoming an English teacher: An Arts-informed and inquiry-based
model of Initial Teacher Education
Janet Dutton and Jackie Manuel
SECTION 2 INITIAL TEACHER EDUCATION
Chapter 6: A critical overview of ITE in England
Rachel Roberts
Chapter 7: On mirages and monsters: English Language Arts for the untimely
Dennis Sumara and Rebecca Luce-Kapler
Chapter 8: Developing English teachers in New Zealand: The battle for
professional knowledge
Terry Locke
Chapter 9: Balancing intervention and agency: Reform agendas and
innovations in Initial Teacher Education in Australia
Wayne Sawyer, Jacqueline Manuel and Cal Durrant
Chapter 10: The Complex Enterprise of US Secondary English Teacher
Education
Marshall A. George, Melanie Shoffner and Lisa Scherff
Chapter 11: Blending the old with the new: Year-long Secondary English
internships in Western Australia
Cal Durrant and Susan Ledger
Chapter 12: Disruptive synergy: Reframing the policy-practice discourse to
transform teacher education
Tiffany Karalis Noel, Amanda Winkelsas and Julie Gorlewski
SECTION 3 LIFE AS AN ENGLISH TEACHER
Chapter 13: A praxis of pre-service English teacher writing: Walter
Benjamin and 'operating writers' in an age of standardisation
Graham Parr, Scott Bulfin and Fleur Diamond
Chapter 14: Sustaining professional learning for sustainable rural
contexts: The power of the National Writing project in developing adaptive
expertise
James E. Fredricksen and Tanya Baker
Chapter 15: An activist democratic model of teacher professional learning:
The Teaching and Learning Caskets Imaginarium
Jacqueline Manuel, Claire Hansen and Liam E. Semler
Chapter 16: Developing teachers' writing lives: A case study of English
teacher professional learning
Don Carter and Joanne Yoo
Chapter 17: The fate of critical literacy in an age of standards-based
hegemonies: The New Zealand context
Susan Sandretto, Derek Shafer and Terry Locke
SECTION 4 GREAT TEACHERS OF ENGLISH
Chapter 18: The attrition of the expertise of teachers of English: From the
rich pedagogy of personal and social agency to the poverty of the powerful
knowledge heritage model
Andrew Goodwyn
Chapter 19: Expert English teachers as/in groups
Wayne Sawyer
Chapter 20: Long time becoming: The role of cultural memory and
professional learning in sustaining English teaching
Fleur Diamond, Scott Bulfin and Graham Parr
Chapter 21: Teachers of writing also write: Insights from the Toronto
Writing Project
Ben Gallagher, Ashleigh A. Allen and Rob Simon
Chapter 22: The courage to teach today: What do teachers need?
Ken Lindblom and Leila Christenbury
Introduction: The remarkable careers of English teachers
Andrew Goodwyn
SECTION 1 WHAT MAKES AN ENGLISH TEACHER
Chapter 1: 'I can't imagine a better profession': Factors influencing the
decision to teach English
Jacqueline Manuel and Janet Dutton
Chapter 2: Literature, university education and the making of English
teachers
Wayne Sawyer, Larissa McLean Davies and Philip Mead
Chapter 3: English Teachers as Readers: Identity and Knowledge
Matthew Sroka, Judith Franzak and Don Zancanella
Chapter 4: Stylistics as pedagogy: the value of literary linguistics for
the secondary literature classroom
Marcello Giovanelli
Chapter 5: Becoming an English teacher: An Arts-informed and inquiry-based
model of Initial Teacher Education
Janet Dutton and Jackie Manuel
SECTION 2 INITIAL TEACHER EDUCATION
Chapter 6: A critical overview of ITE in England
Rachel Roberts
Chapter 7: On mirages and monsters: English Language Arts for the untimely
Dennis Sumara and Rebecca Luce-Kapler
Chapter 8: Developing English teachers in New Zealand: The battle for
professional knowledge
Terry Locke
Chapter 9: Balancing intervention and agency: Reform agendas and
innovations in Initial Teacher Education in Australia
Wayne Sawyer, Jacqueline Manuel and Cal Durrant
Chapter 10: The Complex Enterprise of US Secondary English Teacher
Education
Marshall A. George, Melanie Shoffner and Lisa Scherff
Chapter 11: Blending the old with the new: Year-long Secondary English
internships in Western Australia
Cal Durrant and Susan Ledger
Chapter 12: Disruptive synergy: Reframing the policy-practice discourse to
transform teacher education
Tiffany Karalis Noel, Amanda Winkelsas and Julie Gorlewski
SECTION 3 LIFE AS AN ENGLISH TEACHER
Chapter 13: A praxis of pre-service English teacher writing: Walter
Benjamin and 'operating writers' in an age of standardisation
Graham Parr, Scott Bulfin and Fleur Diamond
Chapter 14: Sustaining professional learning for sustainable rural
contexts: The power of the National Writing project in developing adaptive
expertise
James E. Fredricksen and Tanya Baker
Chapter 15: An activist democratic model of teacher professional learning:
The Teaching and Learning Caskets Imaginarium
Jacqueline Manuel, Claire Hansen and Liam E. Semler
Chapter 16: Developing teachers' writing lives: A case study of English
teacher professional learning
Don Carter and Joanne Yoo
Chapter 17: The fate of critical literacy in an age of standards-based
hegemonies: The New Zealand context
Susan Sandretto, Derek Shafer and Terry Locke
SECTION 4 GREAT TEACHERS OF ENGLISH
Chapter 18: The attrition of the expertise of teachers of English: From the
rich pedagogy of personal and social agency to the poverty of the powerful
knowledge heritage model
Andrew Goodwyn
Chapter 19: Expert English teachers as/in groups
Wayne Sawyer
Chapter 20: Long time becoming: The role of cultural memory and
professional learning in sustaining English teaching
Fleur Diamond, Scott Bulfin and Graham Parr
Chapter 21: Teachers of writing also write: Insights from the Toronto
Writing Project
Ben Gallagher, Ashleigh A. Allen and Rob Simon
Chapter 22: The courage to teach today: What do teachers need?
Ken Lindblom and Leila Christenbury
Andrew Goodwyn
SECTION 1 WHAT MAKES AN ENGLISH TEACHER
Chapter 1: 'I can't imagine a better profession': Factors influencing the
decision to teach English
Jacqueline Manuel and Janet Dutton
Chapter 2: Literature, university education and the making of English
teachers
Wayne Sawyer, Larissa McLean Davies and Philip Mead
Chapter 3: English Teachers as Readers: Identity and Knowledge
Matthew Sroka, Judith Franzak and Don Zancanella
Chapter 4: Stylistics as pedagogy: the value of literary linguistics for
the secondary literature classroom
Marcello Giovanelli
Chapter 5: Becoming an English teacher: An Arts-informed and inquiry-based
model of Initial Teacher Education
Janet Dutton and Jackie Manuel
SECTION 2 INITIAL TEACHER EDUCATION
Chapter 6: A critical overview of ITE in England
Rachel Roberts
Chapter 7: On mirages and monsters: English Language Arts for the untimely
Dennis Sumara and Rebecca Luce-Kapler
Chapter 8: Developing English teachers in New Zealand: The battle for
professional knowledge
Terry Locke
Chapter 9: Balancing intervention and agency: Reform agendas and
innovations in Initial Teacher Education in Australia
Wayne Sawyer, Jacqueline Manuel and Cal Durrant
Chapter 10: The Complex Enterprise of US Secondary English Teacher
Education
Marshall A. George, Melanie Shoffner and Lisa Scherff
Chapter 11: Blending the old with the new: Year-long Secondary English
internships in Western Australia
Cal Durrant and Susan Ledger
Chapter 12: Disruptive synergy: Reframing the policy-practice discourse to
transform teacher education
Tiffany Karalis Noel, Amanda Winkelsas and Julie Gorlewski
SECTION 3 LIFE AS AN ENGLISH TEACHER
Chapter 13: A praxis of pre-service English teacher writing: Walter
Benjamin and 'operating writers' in an age of standardisation
Graham Parr, Scott Bulfin and Fleur Diamond
Chapter 14: Sustaining professional learning for sustainable rural
contexts: The power of the National Writing project in developing adaptive
expertise
James E. Fredricksen and Tanya Baker
Chapter 15: An activist democratic model of teacher professional learning:
The Teaching and Learning Caskets Imaginarium
Jacqueline Manuel, Claire Hansen and Liam E. Semler
Chapter 16: Developing teachers' writing lives: A case study of English
teacher professional learning
Don Carter and Joanne Yoo
Chapter 17: The fate of critical literacy in an age of standards-based
hegemonies: The New Zealand context
Susan Sandretto, Derek Shafer and Terry Locke
SECTION 4 GREAT TEACHERS OF ENGLISH
Chapter 18: The attrition of the expertise of teachers of English: From the
rich pedagogy of personal and social agency to the poverty of the powerful
knowledge heritage model
Andrew Goodwyn
Chapter 19: Expert English teachers as/in groups
Wayne Sawyer
Chapter 20: Long time becoming: The role of cultural memory and
professional learning in sustaining English teaching
Fleur Diamond, Scott Bulfin and Graham Parr
Chapter 21: Teachers of writing also write: Insights from the Toronto
Writing Project
Ben Gallagher, Ashleigh A. Allen and Rob Simon
Chapter 22: The courage to teach today: What do teachers need?
Ken Lindblom and Leila Christenbury