Planning with Purpose: A Handbook for New College Teachers
By (Author) Anna J. Small Roseboro
By (author) Claudia A. Marschall
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
13th March 2021
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
371.144
Paperback
142
Width 156mm, Height 217mm, Spine 11mm
222g
Graduate teaching assistants and new college instructors may have questions about lesson planning, grading, and classroom management. Some may be teaching in culturally and experientially diverse settings unfamiliar to them. This mentoring handbook describes but not prescribes methods, materials, and management strategies that can help maintain morale during those critical first years as a college instructor.
Graduate teaching assistants and new college instructors often are advised, coached, and mentored by department professors with little time to meet regularly with their novice educators. This book meets many of the principles outlined in the position statements of the Conference on College Composition and Communications and the Council of Writing Program Administrators. The pedagogical stances on which Planning with Purpose lessons are based will support the work of college supervisors. Using Planning with Purpose: A Handbook for New College Teachers can make pedagogical meetings with new colleagues more efficient and effective.
Heres the twenty-four-hour resourceful mentor that every English teacher wants on call from the moment of planning the first class meeting to the final assessment. From the beginning, these two talented English teachers with decades of experience and current in-put from first year college teachers guide these new instructors on how to achieve the colleges academic goals while focusing directly on the individuals in their classesrepeatedly describing a range of methods beginning with the students knowledge and interests and developing those into the practices of critical thinking and various modes of writing essential to achieve success in their field. Each chapter establishes goals, strategies, practical step-by-step processes, reinforcement, and self-assessment for the assignment all designed to encourage students to build their best skill
sets possible and guiding the college instructor how to succeed at each stage.
What a terrific boon for both new and experienced English educators!
This book is a gem. A practical guide for new college and community college instructors and graduate teaching assistants, it is a sorely needed resource, especially in fluctuating hiring processes. New English composition and literature teachers find what could be a semester long planning guide. Instructors of other subject matter courses find literacy building activities that will fit course goals of developing competent skills in literacy for their college students.
In the book, written by veteran teachers who have helped develop the literacy skills of thousands of students, authors Anna Roseboro and Claudia Marschall provide many suggestions and plans for new college instructors who may not have taught before at any level. Often at a loss about where to begin, such instructors need this book to get their feet on the ground and to help make their students competent readers and writers, listeners and speakers - students ready to meet the challenges of their subsequent years in further college coursework. I recommend this text highly and hope it will be widely used. It is written in a style that is readable, often entertaining, and useful for its audiences.
Writing exercises are only effective when they are well crafted, patiently tried out in the classroom, fine tuned, and then tried out again. The authors of this book are expert guides to this process. Concrete explanations and useful strategies build the readers understanding of writing for different occasions. I wish I had learned to write (assuming I ever did) through exercises like the ones contained in this book.
As a library staff member myself, I especially like the part where the authors recommend bringing chocolates to the librarian every morning. (Wait. They never said that Well, theres an idea for the next edition.)
Drawing on their own college classroom experiences, as well as theory, research, and practice in the field, Anna Roseboro and Claudia Marschall offer a wide range of practical strategies for teaching writing and communication courses. Because I have frequently worked with hundreds of graduate teaching assistants in writing classrooms I think how this book could have helped me mentor them.
Even though Planning with Purpose is designed for newer teachers and their mentors, it has much to offer college-level teachers who have worked with students for years. In addition to thoughtful guidance on how to help students become more effective thinkers and writers and speakers, the book offers many insights into how teachers can interact with students in productive, supportive ways. The classroom is not just a place where we engage with ideas; we also engage with one another. As I read the book, I frequently paused to think about how can use the ideas in my own classroom. I also kept thinking to myself, I wish that had known that when I was a new college teacher.
I also have worked with hundreds, if not thousands, of college teachers across the disciplines throughout my career. As I read Planning with Purpose, it was readily apparent that many of the instructional practices and classroom management strategies would work effectively in general education courses in a wide range of content areas.
Anna J. Small Roseboro, a National Board-Certified Teacher has over four decades teaching in five states. She has experience in public and private schools and colleges, mentoring early career educators, facilitating leadership institutes. She has served as a director of a summer program and chair of her English department, published six textbooks based on these experiences, and was awarded Distinguished Service Awards by the California Association of Teachers of English and the National Council of Teachers of English.
Claudia A. Marschall taught English and theater arts for thirty years for the Buffalo Public Schools in Buffalo, New York. She also mentored newly hired English-language arts teachers and those with fewer than three years of classroom experience through the districts Mentor Teacher Internship Program.