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Academic Literacy and Student Diversity: The Case for Inclusive Practice
Ursula Wingate
€ 42.80
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Description for Academic Literacy and Student Diversity: The Case for Inclusive Practice
Paperback. This book provides a comprehensive overview of approaches to academic literacy instruction and their underpinning theories, as well as a synthesis of the debate on academic literacy over the past 20 years. Series: New Perspectives on Language and Education. Num Pages: 208 pages. BIC Classification: ESF; JNFD; JNM; JNSV. Category: (UP) Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly. Dimension: 149 x 209 x 12. Weight in Grams: 276.
This book provides a comprehensive overview of approaches to academic literacy instruction and their underpinning theories, as well as a synthesis of the debate on academic literacy over the past 20 years. The author argues that the main existing instructional models are inadequate to cater for diverse student populations, and proposes an inclusive practice approach which encourages institutional initiatives that make academic literacy instruction an integrated and accredited part of the curriculum. The book aims to raise awareness of existing innovative literacy pedagogies and argues for the transformation of academic literacy instruction in all universities with diverse student populations.
Product Details
Publisher
Channel View Publications Ltd
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2015
Series
New Perspectives on Language and Education
Condition
New
Number of Pages
208
Place of Publication
Bristol, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781783093472
SKU
V9781783093472
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-50
About Ursula Wingate
Ursula Wingate is Senior Lecturer in Language in Education at King’s College London, UK. Her research interests include English language policies and practices and language teaching methodology. She is joint editor of the Language Learning Journal and on the editorial board of two journals on higher education.
Reviews for Academic Literacy and Student Diversity: The Case for Inclusive Practice
This well written and thoughtful book challenges the public discourse of 'deficiency and remediation' in academic writing. As Wingate points out, widening access to higher education requires recognition that student populations are now more diverse and less prepared for academic study and therefore need positive support when settling into university. The book addresses ways of providing such support in a sensitive as well as a scholarly way and will be a good read for students, faculty and policy people.
Brian Street, Professor Emeritus, King’s College London, UK In this intelligent and accessibly written book the author shows how the impact of EAP can be most effective when inclusivity is taken to mean not just all students, whether native or non-native English speakers, but extended to include literacy instruction in the subject curriculum and to address all aspects of academic literacy. The book sets out the key issues and gives detailed description of the possibilities for practice that is fresh, lucid and uncluttered. This is a book which will interest anyone working in EAP today.
Ken Hyland, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong A must-read for every university teacher who's keen to help students of all backgrounds achieve their best. Ursula Wingate has that rare gift of going straight to the heart of the matter, in clear prose, while never losing sight of scholarship. Academic literacy, she persuasively argues, belongs at the epicentre of university learning.
Dai Hounsell, Professor Emeritus, University of Edinburgh, UK This book is wide-randing in the issues it covers and provides a considered account of what is at stake in discipline-based literacy instruction.
Steve Price, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 41:2
This is a book that all teachers of academic literacy at tertiary level...should read, and I strongly recommend it. It provides clear summaries of research and scholarship to date, as well as laying out a pathway for development of the field.
Rosemary Wette, University of Auckland, New Zealand
New Zealand Studies in Applied Linguistics, 22 (1), 2016
is a straightforward account of current academic literacy at the university level. Ursula Wingate reviews relevant literature and summarizes main topics that affect the epistemology and practice of advanced literacy for a diverse population. The clear and straightforward tone will capture the interest of university professionals, especially writing experts and subject lecturers who work with international and non-English speaking students.
Laura Dubcovsky, University of California, Davis, USA
LINGUIST List 27.64 (2016)
Academic Literacy and Student Diversity is a book that will appeal to both experts and novices working in the field of academic literacies in higher education. This is not just another textbook on academic literacy but an incisive critique of the often taken-for-granted conceptions of academic literacy and its role in curriculum design and pedagogy. The book is a valuable and welcome contribution to the swiftly growing and reputable New Perspectives on Language and Education series. Adopting a scholarly approach that eschews unnecessary jargon, the author provides a wide-ranging and theoretically grounded overview of approaches to academic literacy and successfully dispels myths and misconceptions about academic literacy.
Thengani H. Ngwenya, Durban University of Technology, South Africa
Journal of Student Affairs in Africa, Volume 3(2) 2015, 61–64
Brian Street, Professor Emeritus, King’s College London, UK In this intelligent and accessibly written book the author shows how the impact of EAP can be most effective when inclusivity is taken to mean not just all students, whether native or non-native English speakers, but extended to include literacy instruction in the subject curriculum and to address all aspects of academic literacy. The book sets out the key issues and gives detailed description of the possibilities for practice that is fresh, lucid and uncluttered. This is a book which will interest anyone working in EAP today.
Ken Hyland, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong A must-read for every university teacher who's keen to help students of all backgrounds achieve their best. Ursula Wingate has that rare gift of going straight to the heart of the matter, in clear prose, while never losing sight of scholarship. Academic literacy, she persuasively argues, belongs at the epicentre of university learning.
Dai Hounsell, Professor Emeritus, University of Edinburgh, UK This book is wide-randing in the issues it covers and provides a considered account of what is at stake in discipline-based literacy instruction.
Steve Price, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 41:2
This is a book that all teachers of academic literacy at tertiary level...should read, and I strongly recommend it. It provides clear summaries of research and scholarship to date, as well as laying out a pathway for development of the field.
Rosemary Wette, University of Auckland, New Zealand
New Zealand Studies in Applied Linguistics, 22 (1), 2016
is a straightforward account of current academic literacy at the university level. Ursula Wingate reviews relevant literature and summarizes main topics that affect the epistemology and practice of advanced literacy for a diverse population. The clear and straightforward tone will capture the interest of university professionals, especially writing experts and subject lecturers who work with international and non-English speaking students.
Laura Dubcovsky, University of California, Davis, USA
LINGUIST List 27.64 (2016)
Academic Literacy and Student Diversity is a book that will appeal to both experts and novices working in the field of academic literacies in higher education. This is not just another textbook on academic literacy but an incisive critique of the often taken-for-granted conceptions of academic literacy and its role in curriculum design and pedagogy. The book is a valuable and welcome contribution to the swiftly growing and reputable New Perspectives on Language and Education series. Adopting a scholarly approach that eschews unnecessary jargon, the author provides a wide-ranging and theoretically grounded overview of approaches to academic literacy and successfully dispels myths and misconceptions about academic literacy.
Thengani H. Ngwenya, Durban University of Technology, South Africa
Journal of Student Affairs in Africa, Volume 3(2) 2015, 61–64
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