Contents: Introduction. Studying Writing and Learning from a True Longitudinal Perspective. Developing Metacognitive Awareness of the Relationship Between Writing and Learning. Effect of Complex Social Histories on Academic Performance. Writing Demands in Relation to Composition Instruction. Institutional Testing. Instructional Settings. Case Studies. Implications for Instruction and Research. Appendices: Study Methodology and Questionnaires. Writing Skills Assessment Test Evaluation Scale (WAT).
"Sternglass displays a thorough knowledge of other student writing
and often presents useful reviews of the scholarship for less
well-read readerrs. She also provides useful advice both for
instructors and for researchers interested in doing their own
longitudinal studies."
—Basic Writing e-Journal"The volume leaves one in awe of how much a
dedicated faculty can accomplish, dismayed at the circumstances
that brought such poorly prepared students to college classrooms,
and aware of how much more could have been accomplished during
those seven years..."
—CHOICE"Not only has Sternglass made a contribution here to
pedagogy and research, but her analysis should also illumine social
policy."
—IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication"...required
reading for policy makers who make the overarching decisions about
who gets educated and how....Sternglass gives us considerable new
knowledge about the development of writing and learning in
college..."
—Journal of Adolescent and Adult Learning"Sternglass's work is a
landmark of sorts, as it is the first longitudinal study of writing
and learning at a college level that takes into account not only
students' academic lives but also their personal lives....Time to
Know Them is an important book, and its poignant and sincere
presentation of students' academic and non-academic lives is
commendable."
—Journal of Basic Writing"...book is clear and significant, and she
offers us compelling documentary. This capable, caring, and
eloquent practitioner/researcher explicates a concept too often
forgotten in the daily 'processing' of students through our
classes: students' growing abilities to reason, solve problems,
think critically, and express social concern."
—Teaching English in the Two-Year College."At a time when
institutions of higher education are closing their doors to
students who are labeled underprepared or remedial, when
decontextualized forms of assessment are being used to either place
students into courses or limit their instruction, and when
students' academic potential is undermined by preconceptions about
their abilities, Sternglass's impressive study makes clear that
such efforts are wrongheaded, that the lives of students (and of
those who work with them) will be impoverished if we as teachers
and researchers do not take the 'time to know them.'"
—TESOL Quarterly"...one of the few scholarly discussions of writing
pedagogy that tells and documents the full truth about how people
learn to write....Sternglass, more than anyone else I have read,
gives us the full picture of the effects of writing pedagogies on
undergraduate students. She discusses their backgrounds, their
development as students, as people, and as respondents to the
bureaucracies of writing assessment. The book relates the struggles
and achievements of the students to financial situations in the
university and in the city and state of New York. Every aspect of
writing development--individual, social, political, and
psychological--is covered in this book. It should be required
reading for graduate students in English, Rhetoric, and Composition
faculty members, writing program administrators, and especially,
deans and faculty members in non-English departments who think they
know what 'the teaching of writing' entails. Sternglass should be
congratulated for helping us bring realism to the understanding of
writing pedagogy."
—David Bleich
University of Rochester"...takes the study of student writing into
new and ferociously important territory. Through a patient,
longitudinal lens, Marilyn Sternglass shows how her students at
City College gathered the inner and outer resources to pursue
higher education in a system that was working as often against them
as with them. Throughout we see the crucial role that writing plays
in securing for these students their just inheritance of knowledge,
self-illumination, and dignity. This is a rare chronicle of City
College twenty years after Shaughnessy. It shows what public higher
education really means and why it must be protected."
—Deborah Brandt
University of Wisconsin-Madison and the National Research Center
for Learning an
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