Available Formats
Teaching English Texts 11-18
By (Author) Dr Sue Dymoke
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
30th April 2009
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Secondary schools
Educational: First / native language
820.712
Hardback
208
Width 189mm, Height 246mm
570g
Teaching Texts 11-18 is a book for trainee English teachers, PGCE and GTTP trainees, and those who have recently qualified. This textbook will offer an integrated text-focused approach to teaching the subject of English across the 11-18 age and ability range. The term text' will embrace a variety of texts that are at the heart of the English curriculum and debates about literacy, including scripts and spoken texts, poetry, prose fiction, literary non-fiction, media and multi-modal texts.
Teaching Texts 11-18 will explore practical and inclusive ways into teaching many different types of texts. The use of ICT and considerations for working with lower ability and/or gifted and talented students will feature throughout the book.
The book will draw on both creative practices and current research in the fields of literacy, English teaching pedagogy and ICT. It will include interviews and some examples of textual production from professionals working in different textual fields. It will engage with debates about the current and future construction of the English curriculum both in the UK and in other Anglophone countries. It will support its readers in their professional development as reflective readers and teachers of texts.
"Teaching English Texts 11-18 is an excellent introductory manual for new English teachers...[it] offers readers useful insight into the teaching of texts in the English classroom, and it also provides the reader with an overview of many of the themes, issues and pedagogical concerns of the modern day English teacher." Learning and Teaching Update, October 2009
'I don't think - however busy I become - that I will forget about this book. By the time I finished it, I had pages of ideas, a list of websites and the names of short stories and writers that I wanted to start working with immediately.' Changing English
Sue Dymoke leads the PhD programme for Institute of Education at Nottingham Trent University, UK. She is editor (with Anthony Wilson and Andrew Lambirth) of Making Poetry Happen (Bloomsbury, 2015) and Making Poetry Matter (Bloomsbury, 2015) and author of Teaching English Texts 11-18 (Bloomsbury, 2009). She is external evaluator for Paul Hamlyn First Story Student Ambassadors scheme, a member of NAWE Higher Education committee and Nottingham UNESCO City of Literature wider board, and a poetry workshop facilitator.