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E-grāmata: Language Teachers' Narratives of Practice

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  • Formāts: 200 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-Aug-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781443866323
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  • Formāts: 200 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-Aug-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781443866323
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Language Teachers' Narratives of Practice is a collection of seventeen essays that examine personal and professional stories of, and by, language teachers in diverse Australian contexts. The voices of twenty-one Australian language teachers in all, describe teachers' own linguistic and cultural, personal and professional narratives, and how each narrative has informed the construction of their classroom language teaching practice to suit their teaching contexts. We see how teachers make individual responses to emerging pedagogies, developed through the lens of their personal experience and understanding of language and culture. In our invitations to these teachers to contribute chapters to the book, we have encouraged them to make visible the diversity within the Australian language teaching context. This is a new resource for use in a professional development context, for pre-service teachers, in-service teachers, tertiary teacher educators and researchers. This resource will serve as a practical text for teachers to draw on, to extend their own professional knowledge and classroom practice in relevant, useful and diverse areas. The narratives can be examined as case studies of teacher identity and life-worlds, development of pedagogies, intercultural learning, and the differentiation and adaptation needed in particular environments, within a diverse environment such as Australia.

Recenzijas

'This book is a welcome addition to the growing literature that aims to give voice to, and thereby value to, first person accounts of language learning. [ ...] The strength of the book lies in the passion it conveys as it links the personal life experience of teachers as learners with their own past and how this past has informed their current practice. [ ...] This collection of stories will entertain, fascinate and inspire in equal measure. I recommend it to practising teachers, teacher educators and scholars interested in intercultural narratives. Indeed, anyone who has engaged with language and intercultural learning (and who hasn't?) will find resonance with their own experience.'Simon CoffeyKing's College LondonThe Language Learning Journal, 04.09.2014'This is a fascinating book, not least for language teachers in Europe. The narratives are both personal and professional, as teachers tell about themselves as teachers and as learners and the links between the two. As one contributor puts it: 'Looking back, I can see how the varied experiences in my life have shaped the type of language teacher I am today.' The languages learnt and taught range from Noongar to Japanese passing through French, German, Latin, Indonesian and others. The teaching described includes 'heritage', 'intercultural', 'digital', 'immersion', 'community', with a focus sometimes on motivation and retention, sometimes on elite, gifted, privileged and sometimes on disadvantaged learners. Because each chapter brings a different story but also a different style of writing and narrating, the book is a fine representation of a multifarious teaching force which Australia is lucky to have.'Michael Byram

Foreword viii
Preface xiii
Angela Scarino
Abbreviations xix
Lesley Harbon
Robyn Moloney
Chapter One Introduction: Language Teachers and their Narratives
1(15)
Lesley Harbon
Robyn Moloney
Chapter Two Learning and Teaching an Australian Aboriginal Language in Western Australia
16(6)
Coleen Sherratt
Chapter Three Ripples in the Pond
22(15)
Tracey Cameron
Chapter Four "They Bombed Us"---Teaching Japanese in Country New South Wales: Privilege and Parochialism
37(11)
Mercurius Goldstein
Chapter Five Teaching in a Primary Immersion Model
48(8)
Kylie Farmer
Chapter Six Teaching in CLIL Programs: Queensland Teachers' Stories of Bilingual Education
56(10)
Jen McKendry
Ulla Freihofner
Simone Smala
Chapter Seven Intercultural Language Learning for Multi-Focal Vision
66(8)
Melissa Gould-Drakeley
Chapter Eight Different Yet Alike: Intercultural Language Learning
74(7)
Irina Braun
Chapter Nine Generation Y, Digital Game-Based Learning and the Learning of Additional Languages
81(9)
Andrew Blumbergs
Chapter Ten Boys and Language Education
90(10)
Curtis Hwang
Chapter Eleven Teaching Japanese to Gifted and Talented Girls
100(11)
Sally Mizoshiri
Chapter Twelve Multi-Level Classes and Heritage Learners: Teaching Chinese in Metropolitan Sydney
111(9)
Kylie Ha
Chapter Thirteen One Teacher's Exploration of the Personal and the Professional
120(8)
Jian Lian Liang
Robyn Moloney
Chapter Fourteen Audio Video Disco: Listening, Watching and Learning, as a Classics Teacher in Australia
128(12)
Emily Matters
Chapter Fifteen Collaboration Calling: My Crusade to Make Community Languages Mainstream
140(8)
Mala Mehta
Caroline Mahoney
Chapter Sixteen My Story and the Teaching of Arabic
148(10)
Enaam Darido
Chapter Seventeen Eyes Wide Opened
158(9)
Benjamin Gibb
Chapter Eighteen An Unfinished Journey: Reflecting on Twenty Years of Teaching and Learning Indonesian
167(9)
Kate Reitzenstein
Contributors 176(3)
Index 179
Lesley Harbon is Associate Professor in Languages Education in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at the University of Sydney, Australia. She has published in the areas of language teacher professional development, bilingual education, intercultural language education and the impact of short term international experiences on language teacher knowledge about language.Robyn Moloney is a Senior Lecturer in Languages Education in the School of Education, Faculty of Human Sciences at Macquarie University, Australia. Her research publications include studies of intercultural language learning, language teacher development, heritage Japanese learners, and Chinese teaching in Australia. She has many years' experience in school language teaching.