Fr. 66.00

Dialogic Literary Argumentation in High School Language Arts Classroom - A Social Perspective for Teaching, Learning, and Reading Literature

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Written by leaders in the field of literacy and language arts Education, this volume defines Dialogic Literary Argumentation, outlines its key principles, and provides in-depth analysis of classroom social practices and teacher-student interactions to illustrate the possibilities of a social perspective for a new vision of teaching, reading and understanding literature.

Dialogic Literary Argumentation builds on the idea of arguing to learn to engage teachers and students in using literature to explore what it means to be human situated in the world at a particular time and place. Dialogic Literary Argumentation fosters deep and complex understandings of literature by engaging students in dialogical social practices that foster dialectical spaces, intertextuality, and an unpacking of taken-for-granted assumptions about rationality and personhood. Dialogic Literary Argumentation offers new ways to engage in argumentation aligned with new ways to read literature in the high school classroom.

Offering theory and analysis to shape the future use of literature in secondary classrooms, this text will be great interest to researchers, graduate and postgraduate students, academics and libraries in the fields of English and Language Arts Education, Teacher Education, Literacy Studies, Writing and Composition.

List of contents

Acknowledgments
Members of the Ohio State University Argumentative Writing Project
Chapter 1 – Introduction to Dialogic Literary Argumentation
Chapter 2 – Toward a Model of Dialogic Literary Argumentation
Chapter 3 – Constructing Dialogue and Dialectics in the Teaching, Learning and Reading of Literature
Chapter 4 – Constructing Multiple Perspectives in the Teaching, Learning and Reading of Literature
Chapter 5 – Constructing Intertextuality and Indexicality in the Teaching, Learning and Reading of Literature
Chapter 6 – Constructing Personhood in the Teaching, Learning and Reading of Literature
Chapter 7 -– Final Comments
References
Index

About the author

David Bloome is EHE Distinguished Professor of Teaching and Learning at The Ohio State University, USA.
George E. Newell is Professor of English Education at The Ohio State University, USA.
Alan Hirvela is Professor of Teaching and Learning at The Ohio State University, USA.
Tzu-Jung Lin is Associate Professor of Educational Psychology in the Department of Educational Studies at The Ohio State University, USA.

Summary

This volume defines Dialogic Literary Argumentation, outlines its key principles, and provides in-depth analysis of classroom social practices and teacher-student interactions to illustrate the possibilities of a social perspective for a new vision of teaching, reading and understanding literature.

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