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What Works in Grammar Instruction - by Deborah Dean (Paperback)
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Highlights
- A friendly and practical guide for teaching English grammar in the context of real, lived language.As most teachers of English now know, research shows that teaching grammar in the traditional way--through worksheets, memorizing definitions, and diagramming sentences--doesn't work, and that teaching grammar in the context of reading and writing is a better approach.People who understand language can make things happen.
- About the Author: Deborah Dean is fascinated with language.
- 177 Pages
- Education, Elementary
Description
About the Book
"Addresses the challenges of teaching grammar in the context of reading and writing, providing vignettes of classroom conversations that exemplify what that practice can look like in action"--Book Synopsis
A friendly and practical guide for teaching English grammar in the context of real, lived language.
As most teachers of English now know, research shows that teaching grammar in the traditional way--through worksheets, memorizing definitions, and diagramming sentences--doesn't work, and that teaching grammar in the context of reading and writing is a better approach.
People who understand language can make things happen. That is the point of grammar/language teaching. Not definitions. Not terminology. Language.
Veteran teacher educator Deborah Dean addresses the realities and challenges of grammar instruction with practical examples and experiences, including:
- Vignettes of classroom conversations to show what teaching in context can look like in action
- Classroom practices to help teachers try out the ideas with their own students
- Issues such as helping English language learners and native speakers navigate formal, academic English, especially in the context of testing
Dean's straightforward approach uncomplicates the task of teaching grammar in context, allowing her--and us--to share the excitement and wonder to be found in the study of language.
About the Author
Deborah Dean is fascinated with language. She regularly brings humor to others' lives by commenting on some felicity of language that catches her fancy: they laugh, roll their eyes, and move on. But that doesn't stop her from noticing and thinking about the whys and the hows of language as it is used by the world around her. She used to teach junior high and high school students about language, hoping to ignite within them the curiosity about language she thinks it deserves--after all, we are surrounded by language in a variety of forms every waking minute. Now she teaches preservice teachers and tries to do the same thing--help them develop their interest and curiosity about language and how it works. Deborah is the author of numerous articles, some quick-reference guides, and several books, including Strategic Writing (2nd ed.), Genre Theory, and What Works in Writing Instruction (2nd ed.), and, with Jeff Anderson, Revision Decisions. When she's not writing or teaching, she likes to bake cookies and spend time with her family.