|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jennifer FletcherPublisher: Taylor & Francis Inc Imprint: Stenhouse Publishers Dimensions: Width: 18.70cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.530kg ISBN: 9781571109996ISBN 10: 1571109994 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 17 February 2015 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsI first met Jennifer Fletcher when she joined our ERWC Task Force as a high school representative. At the time she was Chair of English at Buena Park High School, but she was working on a Ph.D. at UC Riverside (and raising two kids!). Soon she surprised us by taking an English Education position at CSU Monterey Bay. Jennifer has an amazing resume: high school teaching, chairing a department, scholarship, and publications. She is quite agile in moving from theory to practice. And she lives and breathes ERWC. So it was no surprise to me when she published this wonderful and timely book, Teaching Arguments: Rhetorical Comprehension, Critique, and Response. The book synthesizes concepts from classical rhetoric, modern rhetoric, Common Core State Standards, and Jennifer's teaching experience and wisdom. It manages to be both academic and personal, with practical teaching strategies on every page. As Jennifer herself says in the introduction: This book is about opening doors to deeper learning for all our students through a rhetorical approach to arguments--an approach based on situational awareness and responsiveness instead of rules and formulas. Throughout the chapters, you'll find detailed examples of activities, such as the rhetorical precis, descriptive outlining, and the doubting and believing game, that show students how to move beyond a superficial response to texts (xiv). A bit later she offers a justification for teaching rhetorically: Rhetoric targets the conventions and processes of high academic literacy, including the sophisticated responsiveness to context that characterizes college and workplace writing. Writing rhetorically means writing with attention to argument, purpose, audience, authority, and style demanded by academic texts (xv). The first chapter is about open-minded inquiry. It begins with activities for closely attending to the features of a text, even a visual text such as a painting. Then Peter Elbow's believing game is introduced (the doubting game will appear in the next chapter) along with checklist questions for facilitating the activity. This is demonstrated through a detailed analysis of an op-ed by David Brooks, followed by a section on Discovering the Question at Issue which is built around the Ciceronian concept of stasis. Stasis theory is presented with lots of examples and sample questions, making it clear how it might be used with students. Though the theories deployed span centuries, everything is tied together by the focus on the classroom and the students and by the author's personal experience. Subsequent chapters discuss critical approaches to text, modern application of the ancient Greek concept of Kairos (timeliness and appropriateness), audience, purpose, and the three appeals-ethos, pathos and logos. The chapter on the appeals is especially useful because it goes deep into each appeal rather than engaging in the checklist sort of approach that many teachers fall into. Every rhetorical concept is described, contextualized, demonstrated, and explained, often with charts, handouts and other activities that can be used directly in class, with more available in the appendix. The final chapter is called Aristotle's Guide to Becoming a 'Good' Student, but it is really Jennifer's guide. It focuses on habit, identity, confidence, self-perception, performance, insiders versus outsiders, modeling, mentoring, teachable moments, imitation, and flow. Obviously these concepts go far beyond Aristotle. Reading this book is like accompanying the author on a personal intellectual journey through rhetoric and teaching, a journey on which you learn, grow, and pick up handouts that you can use on Monday morning. I recommend it highly. Teaching Text Rhetorically Oct 2016 I first met Jennifer Fletcher when she joined our ERWC Task Force as a high school representative. At the time she was Chair of English at Buena Park High School, but she was working on a Ph.D. at UC Riverside (and raising two kids!). Soon she surprised us by taking an English Education position at CSU Monterey Bay. Jennifer has an amazing resume: high school teaching, chairing a department, scholarship, and publications. She is quite agile in moving from theory to practice. And she lives and breathes ERWC. So it was no surprise to me when she published this wonderful and timely book, <i>Teaching Arguments: Rhetorical Comprehension, Critique, and Response</i>. The book synthesizes concepts from classical rhetoric, modern rhetoric, Common Core State Standards, and Jennifer s teaching experience and wisdom. It manages to be both academic and personal, with practical teaching strategies on every page. As Jennifer herself says in the introduction: This book is about opening doors to deeper learning for all our students through a rhetorical approach to arguments an approach based on situational awareness and responsiveness instead of rules and formulas. Throughout the chapters, you ll find detailed examples of activities, such as the rhetorical precis, descriptive outlining, and the doubting and believing game, that show students how to move beyond a superficial response to texts (xiv). A bit later she offers a justification for teaching rhetorically: Rhetoric targets the conventions and processes of high academic literacy, including the sophisticated responsiveness to context that characterizes college and workplace writing. Writing rhetorically means writing with attention to argument, purpose, audience, authority, and style demanded by academic texts (xv). The first chapter is about open-minded inquiry. It begins with activities for closely attending to the features of a text, even a visual text such as a painting. Then Peter Elbow s believing game is introduced (the doubting game will appear in the next chapter) along with checklist questions for facilitating the activity. This is demonstrated through a detailed analysis of an op-ed by David Brooks, followed by a section on Discovering the Question at Issue which is built around the Ciceronian concept of stasis. Stasis theory is presented with lots of examples and sample questions, making it clear how it might be used with students. Though the theories deployed span centuries, everything is tied together by the focus on the classroom and the students and by the author s personal experience. Subsequent chapters discuss critical approaches to text, modern application of the ancient Greek concept of<i>Kairos</i>(timeliness and appropriateness), audience, purpose, and the three appeals <i>ethos, pathos</i>and<i>logos</i>. The chapter on the appeals is especially useful because it goes deep into each appeal rather than engaging in the checklist sort of approach that many teachers fall into. Every rhetorical concept is described, contextualized, demonstrated, and explained, often with charts, handouts and other activities that can be used directly in class, with more available in the appendix. The final chapter is called Aristotle s Guide to Becoming a Good Student, but it is really Jennifer s guide. It focuses on habit, identity, confidence, self-perception, performance, insiders versus outsiders, modeling, mentoring, teachable moments, imitation, and flow. Obviously these concepts go far beyond Aristotle. Reading this book is like accompanying the author on a personal intellectual journey through rhetoric and teaching, a journey on which you learn, grow, and pick up handouts that you can use on Monday morning. I recommend it highly. Teaching Text Rhetorically Oct 2016 I first met Jennifer Fletcher when she joined our ERWC Task Force as a high school representative. At the time she was Chair of English at Buena Park High School, but she was working on a Ph.D. at UC Riverside (and raising two kids!). Soon she surprised us by taking an English Education position at CSU Monterey Bay. Jennifer has an amazing resume: high school teaching, chairing a department, scholarship, and publications. She is quite agile in moving from theory to practice. And she lives and breathes ERWC. So it was no surprise to me when she published this wonderful and timely book, Teaching Arguments: Rhetorical Comprehension, Critique, and Response. The book synthesizes concepts from classical rhetoric, modern rhetoric, Common Core State Standards, and Jennifer's teaching experience and wisdom. It manages to be both academic and personal, with practical teaching strategies on every page. As Jennifer herself says in the introduction: This book is about opening doors to deeper learning for all our students through a rhetorical approach to arguments--an approach based on situational awareness and responsiveness instead of rules and formulas. Throughout the chapters, you'll find detailed examples of activities, such as the rhetorical precis, descriptive outlining, and the doubting and believing game, that show students how to move beyond a superficial response to texts (xiv). A bit later she offers a justification for teaching rhetorically: Rhetoric targets the conventions and processes of high academic literacy, including the sophisticated responsiveness to context that characterizes college and workplace writing. Writing rhetorically means writing with attention to argument, purpose, audience, authority, and style demanded by academic texts (xv). The first chapter is about open-minded inquiry. It begins with activities for closely attending to the features of a text, even a visual text such as a painting. Then Peter Elbow's believing game is introduced (the doubting game will appear in the next chapter) along with checklist questions for facilitating the activity. This is demonstrated through a detailed analysis of an op-ed by David Brooks, followed by a section on Discovering the Question at Issue which is built around the Ciceronian concept of stasis. Stasis theory is presented with lots of examples and sample questions, making it clear how it might be used with students. Though the theories deployed span centuries, everything is tied together by the focus on the classroom and the students and by the author's personal experience. Subsequent chapters discuss critical approaches to text, modern application of the ancient Greek concept of Kairos (timeliness and appropriateness), audience, purpose, and the three appeals-ethos, pathos and logos. The chapter on the appeals is especially useful because it goes deep into each appeal rather than engaging in the checklist sort of approach that many teachers fall into. Every rhetorical concept is described, contextualized, demonstrated, and explained, often with charts, handouts and other activities that can be used directly in class, with more available in the appendix. The final chapter is called Aristotle's Guide to Becoming a 'Good' Student, but it is really Jennifer's guide. It focuses on habit, identity, confidence, self-perception, performance, insiders versus outsiders, modeling, mentoring, teachable moments, imitation, and flow. Obviously these concepts go far beyond Aristotle. Reading this book is like accompanying the author on a personal intellectual journey through rhetoric and teaching, a journey on which you learn, grow, and pick up handouts that you can use on Monday morning. I recommend it highly. Teaching Text Rhetorically Oct 2016 Author InformationJennifer Fletcher is a professor of English at California State University, Monterey Bay. Before joining the faculty at CSUMB, she taught high school English for more than ten years in Southern California. She is the author of Teaching Arguments: Rhetorical Comprehension, Critique, and Response (2015, Stenhouse). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |