Katie O. Arosteguy, Alison Bright, Brenda J. Rinard
Foreword by: Mya Poe
Publication Date: June 7, 2019
Pages: 208
This concise handbook helps educators write for the rhetorical situations they will face as students of education, and as preservice and practicing teachers. It provides clear and helpful advice for responding to the varying contexts, audiences, and purposes that arise in four written categories in education: classroom, research, credential, and stakeholder writing. The book moves from academic to professional writing and chapters include a discussion of relevant genres, mentor texts with salient features identified, visual aids, and exercises that ask students to apply their understanding of the concepts. Readers learn about the scholarly and qualitative research processes prevalent in the field of education and are encouraged to use writing to facilitate change that improves teaching and learning conditions.
Book Features:
Katie O. Arosteguy, Alison Bright, and Brenda J. Rinard are senior lecturers in the University Writing Program at the University of California, Davis, where they teach professional writing, including a course on writing in education. They are all National Writing Project Teacher-Consultants.
"This text is accessible, student-friendly, and organized in a way that will support readers’ learning...can help teachers at any stage of their career to grow as writers. It can also help teacher-writers become the kind of teachers who reflect on their pedagogical choices and who write as a way to improve the conditions for all teachers and students."
—Teachers College Record
“Helping teacher candidates with the vast variety of writing formats and requirements is important work. The authors have done a very good job of covering almost all the bases.”
—The Texas Forum of Teacher Education
“At the heart of A Student's Guide to Academic and Professional Writing in Educationis a commitment to the value of teachers’ voices—that what teachers write matters, whether it be classroom writing, research writing, credential writing, or stakeholder writing. And it is this hopeful potential of teaching writing to aspiring teachers that underscores the value of teaching writing across the disciplines and into the community today."
―From the Foreword by Mya Poe, director of the Writing Program, Northeastern University
“My favorite thing about this book is that it acknowledges that educators write in the first place. The writing of teachers and other educators is such an important tool not only for teaching but for professional learning, for reflection, and for advocacy. This book is one tool to help prospective educators embrace all the writing that is to come.”
—Anne Elrod Whitney, Penn State College of Education
“To fulfill the promise in their title, the authors needed to be experts in writing studies, teacher education, and K–12 teaching; Arosteguy, Bright, and Rinard clearly have the necessary expertise and experience. Their guide, which is grounded in rhetorical analysis and genre study, will help student writers, not only as they become teachers but also as they teach and live in the world. Providing a mini-course in educational research, the book is useful across a number of courses and points in a credential program or on the learning-to-teach continuum. Like all the best teaching, the instruction offered emerges from work with students. The authors know the questions students might ask and the places where they might misstep. The book is supportive, analytical, logically sequenced, clear, and student friendly. Promise fulfilled.”
—Tim Dewar, Gevirtz Graduate School of Education, UC Santa Barbara
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