Voicing Ourselves: Whose Words We Use When We Talk about Books (Literacy Culture Learning)
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ISBN 9780791436585
Book info: Voicing Ourselves: Whose Words We Use When We Talk about Books (Literacy Culture Learning) (Hardcover, 274 pages) – State University of New York Press, 1998. Language: English. Using Bakhtinian theory, this study reveals how and why readers routinely refer to the words and ideas of others to interpret...
Book info: Voicing Ourselves: Whose Words We Use When We Talk about Books (Literacy Culture Learning) (Hardcover, 274 pages) – State University of New York Press, 1998. Language: English.
Using Bakhtinian theory, this study reveals how and why readers routinely refer to the words and ideas of others to interpret the meanings and implications of the books they read.In a public high school classroom in the San Francisco Bay area, a group of twelfth graders have decided themselves to enroll for Advanced-Placement English. Faced with unprecedented diversity for such a class in terms of academic and ethnic backgrounds, veteran teacher Joan Cone dared to trust her students to lead their own discussions of a variety of provocative authors including Baldwin, Didion, Malcolm X, and Woolf. Voicing Ourselves examines a year's worth of such sessions, revealing how a teacher's role is transformed, and, moreover, offering an important component in any teacher's repertoire of instructional strategies: student-led discussion. Above all, the book shows the startling success of students licensed to engage one another directly in talk about books, revealing the richly social tapestry of such conversations.