Christine M. Tardy
Second Language Writing Series
Edited by Paul Kei Matsuda
Information and Pricing
978-1-60235-112-7 (paperback, $32.00); 978-1-60235-113-4 (hardcover, $65.00) 978-1-60235-114-1 (PDF, $19.99) © 2009 by Parlor Press; 331 pages, with illustrations, notes, and bibliography.
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About This Book
Building Genre Knowledge traces the writing of four multilingual graduate students in engineering and computer sciences over time, offering a window into the writers’ processes in developing increasingly sophisticated knowledge of academic and professional genres. These in-depth longitudinal case studies follow the writers’ trajectories through the overlapping settings of writing classrooms, disciplinary content classrooms, and scholarly research. The writers’ texts, interview discussions, professors’ feedback, and classroom experiences together construct a rich picture of the conflicts that they encounter and the learning resources available to them in different settings over time.
Through close examination of the stories of these writers, Building Genre Knowledge articulates a theory of genre knowledge development that allows for complexity across individuals, communities, and tasks. After first outlining an accessible model of genre knowledge that encompasses multiple knowledge domains, the book explores the ways in which writers develop increasingly sophisticated genre knowledge as they move through their graduate education.
Adopting an interdisciplinary perspective, Building Genre Knowledge provides a unique look into the processes of building genre knowledge while offering a dynamic theory of those processes that is inclusive of both monolingual and multilingual writers—a necessary move in today’s linguistically diverse classrooms. It will therefore be of great interest to researchers and practitioners in both first and second language writing studies.
About the Author
Christine M. Tardy is an Assistant Professor of Writing, Rhetoric, and Discourse at DePaul University in Chicago, where she serves as Graduate Director and teaches courses in writing, teacher education, and applied linguistics. She has taught English as a second or foreign language in the U.S., Czech Republic, Japan, and Turkey. She has published extensively in the areas of genre and discourse studies, second language writing, and academic writing instruction.
Contents
Acknowledgments
1 Genre and Genre Knowledge
2 The Researcher and the Writers
3 Learning through Other People’s Words
4 Genre Analysis in the Writing Classroom
5 Accumulated Exposure and the Learning of a Multimodal Genre
6 Repeated Practice: Lab Reports in the Graduate Classroom
7 The Culmination of Graduate Research: Learning to Write a Master’s Thesis
8 Writing for/in a Discipline: First Forays into the Larger Research World
9 Building Genre Knowledge
Appendices A-E
Notes
References
Index