Research in the Teaching of English - Volume 34, Issue 4, 2000
Volume 34, Issue 4, 2000
- Articles
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EDITORS’ INTRODUCTION: Telos and Educational Research
More LessAuthor(s): Peter Smagorinsky and Michael W. SmithThe editors expound on the term telos, the concept of an optimal developmental outcome that provides the motive for the ways in which people are socialized within a culture. The notion of a telos for schooling is important because it provides the ideal toward which all are expected to gravitate. Conceptions of how students should develop suggest ways of being a teacher and paths for improving practice, which in turn suggest ways of being a teacher educator.
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Co-Authoring Classroom Texts: Shifting Participant Roles in Writing Activity
More LessAuthor(s): Joanne Larson and Maryrita MaierShows how one first-grade teacher explicitly modeled her own authorship processes and how students took up those processes in their own writing. Analyzes classroom discourse to illustrate how the teacher and students shifted roles in the participation framework of writing activity among teacher, author, co-author, and overhearer to facilitate the co-construction of written texts.
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Finding the Right Words: A Case Study in Classroom-Based Language and Literacy Support
More LessAuthor(s): Francine Falk-RossPresents a school-year-long case study of a fourth-grade boy with a history of language difficulties. Describes development of a set of curriculum-centered, classroom-based strategies for language and literacy support. Focuses on changes in the student's language constructions and communicative competence, in the form of the teacher's supportive strategies, and in the speech/language pathologist's role in the classroom.
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Learning (about Learning) from Four Teachers
More LessAuthor(s): Diane Stephens, Gail Boldt, Candace Clark, Janet S. Gaffney, Judith Shelton, Jennifer Story and Janelle WeinzirlInvestigates elementary school teachers' beliefs and classroom practices about reading. Describes how three of the teachers experimented with new language, beliefs, and/or practices, juxtaposing them with current beliefs and practices. Considers how, at the end of two years, two teachers had altered their beliefs and transformed their practices, primarily because of their inquiry approach.
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Volume 39 (2004 - 2005)
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Volume 38 (2003 - 2004)
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Volume 37 (2002 - 2003)
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Volume 36 (2001 - 2002)
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Volume 35 (2000 - 2001)
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Volume 34 (1999 - 2000)
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Volume 33 (1998 - 1999)
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Volume 32 (1998)
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Volume 31 (1997)
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Volume 30 (1996)
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Volume 29 (1995)
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Volume 28 (1994)
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Volume 27 (1993)
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Volume 26 (1992)
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Volume 25 (1991)
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Volume 24 (1990)
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Volume 23 (1989)
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Volume 21 (1987)
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Volume 19 (1985)
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Volume 18 (1984)
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Volume 17 (1983)
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Volume 16 (1982)
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Volume 15 (1981)
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Volume 14 (1980)
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Volume 13 (1979)
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Volume 12 (1978)
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Volume 11 (1977)
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Volume 10 (1976)
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Volume 9 (1975)
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Volume 8 (1974)
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Volume 7 (1973)
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Volume 6 (1972)
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Volume 5 (1971)
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Volume 4 (1970)
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Volume 3 (1969)
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Volume 2 (1968)
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Volume 1 (1967)
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