Tell Me How It Reads: Tutoring Deaf and Hearing Students in the Writing Center

Tell Me How It Reads: Tutoring Deaf and Hearing Students in the Writing Center

by Rebecca Day Babcock
Tell Me How It Reads: Tutoring Deaf and Hearing Students in the Writing Center

Tell Me How It Reads: Tutoring Deaf and Hearing Students in the Writing Center

by Rebecca Day Babcock

eBook

$24.95 

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Overview

Deaf students are attending mainstream postsecondary institutions in increasing numbers, raising the stakes for the complicated and multifaceted task of tutoring deaf students at these schools. Common tutoring practices used with hearing students do not necessarily work for deaf people. Rebecca Day Babcock researched and wrote Tell Me How It Reads: Tutoring Deaf and Hearing Students in the Writing Center to supply writing instructors an effective set of methods for teaching Deaf and other students how to be better writers.

Babcock’s book is based on the resulting study of tutoring writing in the college context with both deaf and hearing students and their tutors. She describes in detail sessions between deaf students, hearing tutors, and the interpreters that help them communicate, using a variety of English or contact signing rather than ASL in the tutorials. These experiences illustrate the key differences between deaf-hearing and hearing-hearing tutorials and suggest ways to modify tutoring and tutor-training practices accordingly. Although this study describes methods for tutoring deaf students, its focus on students who learn differently can apply to teaching writing to Learning Disabled students, ESL students, and other students with different learning styles. Ultimately, the well-grounded theory analysis within Tell Me How It Reads provides a complete paradigm for tutoring in all writing centers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781563685477
Publisher: Gallaudet University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 364 KB

About the Author

Rebecca Day Babcock is Associate Professor of English, the University of Texas of the Permian Basin, Odessa, TX.

Table of Contents

Contents Preface Positionality Statement Personal Beliefs My Theoretical Foundation Ethical Concerns Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Introduction Current Writing Center Practice Tutor Training Perspective Communication Tutoring Methods Language Culture Rae Blue Kali Chapter 2. The Research Context Observation Interviews Written Documents Final Data Set Data Coding and Analysis Procedures Squirt Shareef Herrodrick Chapter 3. Literacy Work in the Tutoring Session Planning Composing Revising Higher-Order Concerns Lower-Order Concerns Reflecting Reading Research Relationship of Reading to Lower-Order Concerns John Newby Gustav Chapter 4. How Tutoring Gets Done Discourse-Based Taking Charge Taking Charge of Information Reflections on Directiveness Taking Charge of Behavior Relationship of Monitoring to Tutor Training Text-Based Taking Charge Finding and Correcting Errors Taking Charge of Text Making Sense Making Sense of Information Confirming Understanding Making Sense of Behavior Reading for Understanding, Analysis, and Interpretation Evaluating Linda Jay Melissa Communication Interpreters Physical Orientation Technology Miscommunication Display of Affect Encouragement and Evaluation Reflection Amount of Talk Interpersonal Student Characteristics Tutor Characteristics Culture Tutoring Techniques and Learner Characteristics Brock Ann Ted Daisy Chapter 6. Tutoring Deaf Students in the Writing Center Relevant Factors in Tutoring Efficacy of Common Tutoring Techniques Reading Aloud Directiveness Contributing and Complicating Factors Communication Feelings Learner’s Characteristics Culture Tutor Training Practical Techniques Conclusions Bibliography Index
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