Skip to main content
FREE SHIPPING for online orders over $75!
Close this alert
When Teaching Writing Gets Tough: Challenges and Possibilities in Secondary Writing Instruction (Language and Literacy)

When Teaching Writing Gets Tough: Challenges and Possibilities in Secondary Writing Instruction (Language and Literacy)

Current price: $121.00
Publication Date: November 22nd, 2024
Publisher:
Teachers College Press
ISBN:
9780807769935
Pages:
160

Description

Writing instruction is a particular challenge because there is no singular, linear solution to teaching students to write well. This book approaches writing as a wicked problem that takes place in complicated contexts. Through both scholarly research and teacher reflection, it examines ELA classrooms and the experiences of writing teachers to identify approaches that have proven effective with adolescents. The book uses wickedity to frame the problems of teaching writing and offers context-specific solutions enacted by teachers. While it addresses the realities of standardized ways of teaching and assessing writing, the book also highlights the deep professional knowledge and practical strategies teachers bring to writing instruction in middle and high school classrooms. Chapters grapple with tensions between testing and authenticity, assessing writing in nuanced ways, and finding enjoyment in the work of teaching writing amid and alongside persistent complexities. Specific topics include students' writing process, revision, students as decision makers, multimodal writing, assessment and writer's notebooks, data-driven instruction, the high school-to-college transition, and teacher professional development.

Book Features:

  • Includes examples of how teachers approach specific challenges associated with teaching writing to adolescents, analyzing how and why their solutions proved effective.
  • Focuses on students engaged in writing in classrooms, teachers implementing writing strategies, and professional learning.
  • Offers a range of relevant voices on the topic of writing instruction with authors that include classroom teachers and scholars.

About the Author

Annamary Consalvo is an associate professor of literacy at The University of Texas at Tyler. Ann D. David is an associate professor of teacher education at the University of the Incarnate Word and co-director of the San Antonio Writing Project.