Description

Book Synopsis

This book presents the results of research that focused on international students receiving writing instruction on a US university campus. It explores how the students developed their foreign-student identities and their own ways of grappling with the unique issues they encountered as they worked to improve their academic literacy skills. The book extends the theoretical horizons of language socialization research by integrating insights from other disciplinary frameworks, such as a translingual approach, multilingual literacies and writing center theory, to explore international students’ university experiences. By adopting these varied lenses, the book provides readers with a more holistic, integrative and ecological understanding of students’ language and literacy development. The authors also investigate how a translingual pedagogy informs language instructors and literacy instructors in facilitating multilingual students’ academic literacy development across a variety of codes, registers, genres, modes and media.



Trade Review
In this timely collection, skillfully edited by De Costa, Li, and Lee, contributors examine the multilingual literacy practices of international students in a large US university. By honoring the linguistic resources and cultural identities of these students, the contributors offer exciting new insights about academic discourse socialization relevant to 21st Century institutions. * Bonny Norton, University of British Columbia, Canada *
This exciting and innovative edited volume is the much-needed answer to the question of what socially responsible multilingual literacy practices in internationalized higher education look like. By viewing the socialization of academic discourse through an asset-based approach, the contributing authors have effectively focused their analyses of multilingual literacy practices on international students’ linguistic and cultural resources. A must-read for all those interested in multilingual literacies in these contexts. * Jim McKinley, University College London, UK *
This volume offers valuable insights into academic discourse socialization in the context of international student mobility. Theoretically and methodologically innovative approaches are utilized to explore the complex and often contested socialization processes through which multilingual learners develop languages, literacies, and identities as part of global study and careers. * Amanda Kibler, Oregon State University, USA *

Table of Contents

Contributors

Patricia A. Duff: Foreword: Examining and Experiencing Academic Discourse Socialization through Collaborative Research

Introduction: Academic Socialization, International Students and Multilingual Literacies

Chapter 1. Peter I. De Costa, Jongbong Lee and Wendy Li: Diversity Matters: Problematizing Academic Discourse Socialization in International Higher Education

Chapter 2. Jongbong Lee and Wendy Li: Academic Socialization in a Collaborative Research Project: Developing Identities as Emergent Scholars

Part 1 : Literacy Practices and Identity Development

Chapter 3. Xiaowan Zhang: Second Language Academic Discourse Socialization, Identity and Agency: The Case of a Chinese International Student

Chapter 4. Bree Straayer-Gannon and Xiqiao Wang: Reinventing Transnational Identities and Sponsors

Part 2: Navigation of Resources and Services

Chapter 5. Wenyue (Melody) Ma and Curtis Green-Eneix: International Chinese Students’ Navigation of Linguistic and Learning Resources

Chapter 6. Myeongeun Son: International Students' Writing Development from an Activity Theory Perspective

Chapter 7. Joseph Cheatle and Scott Jarvie: Responding to ELL Students Across Disciplines: Using Education Research to Inform Writing Center Practice

Part 3: Theoretical and Pedagogical Orientations

Chapter 8. Steven Fraiberg: Shifting from Linguistic to Spatial Repertoires: Extending and Enacting Translingual Perspectives in Our Research and Teaching

Chapter 9. Xiqiao Wang: Writing About Where We Are From: Writing Across Languages, Genres and Spaces

Wenhao Diao: Afterword

Index

International Students' Multilingual Literacy

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A Hardback by Peter I. De Costa, Wendy Li, Jongbong Lee

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    View other formats and editions of International Students' Multilingual Literacy by Peter I. De Costa

    Publisher: Multilingual Matters
    Publication Date: 04/08/2022
    ISBN13: 9781800415553, 978-1800415553
    ISBN10: 1800415559

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    This book presents the results of research that focused on international students receiving writing instruction on a US university campus. It explores how the students developed their foreign-student identities and their own ways of grappling with the unique issues they encountered as they worked to improve their academic literacy skills. The book extends the theoretical horizons of language socialization research by integrating insights from other disciplinary frameworks, such as a translingual approach, multilingual literacies and writing center theory, to explore international students’ university experiences. By adopting these varied lenses, the book provides readers with a more holistic, integrative and ecological understanding of students’ language and literacy development. The authors also investigate how a translingual pedagogy informs language instructors and literacy instructors in facilitating multilingual students’ academic literacy development across a variety of codes, registers, genres, modes and media.



    Trade Review
    In this timely collection, skillfully edited by De Costa, Li, and Lee, contributors examine the multilingual literacy practices of international students in a large US university. By honoring the linguistic resources and cultural identities of these students, the contributors offer exciting new insights about academic discourse socialization relevant to 21st Century institutions. * Bonny Norton, University of British Columbia, Canada *
    This exciting and innovative edited volume is the much-needed answer to the question of what socially responsible multilingual literacy practices in internationalized higher education look like. By viewing the socialization of academic discourse through an asset-based approach, the contributing authors have effectively focused their analyses of multilingual literacy practices on international students’ linguistic and cultural resources. A must-read for all those interested in multilingual literacies in these contexts. * Jim McKinley, University College London, UK *
    This volume offers valuable insights into academic discourse socialization in the context of international student mobility. Theoretically and methodologically innovative approaches are utilized to explore the complex and often contested socialization processes through which multilingual learners develop languages, literacies, and identities as part of global study and careers. * Amanda Kibler, Oregon State University, USA *

    Table of Contents

    Contributors

    Patricia A. Duff: Foreword: Examining and Experiencing Academic Discourse Socialization through Collaborative Research

    Introduction: Academic Socialization, International Students and Multilingual Literacies

    Chapter 1. Peter I. De Costa, Jongbong Lee and Wendy Li: Diversity Matters: Problematizing Academic Discourse Socialization in International Higher Education

    Chapter 2. Jongbong Lee and Wendy Li: Academic Socialization in a Collaborative Research Project: Developing Identities as Emergent Scholars

    Part 1 : Literacy Practices and Identity Development

    Chapter 3. Xiaowan Zhang: Second Language Academic Discourse Socialization, Identity and Agency: The Case of a Chinese International Student

    Chapter 4. Bree Straayer-Gannon and Xiqiao Wang: Reinventing Transnational Identities and Sponsors

    Part 2: Navigation of Resources and Services

    Chapter 5. Wenyue (Melody) Ma and Curtis Green-Eneix: International Chinese Students’ Navigation of Linguistic and Learning Resources

    Chapter 6. Myeongeun Son: International Students' Writing Development from an Activity Theory Perspective

    Chapter 7. Joseph Cheatle and Scott Jarvie: Responding to ELL Students Across Disciplines: Using Education Research to Inform Writing Center Practice

    Part 3: Theoretical and Pedagogical Orientations

    Chapter 8. Steven Fraiberg: Shifting from Linguistic to Spatial Repertoires: Extending and Enacting Translingual Perspectives in Our Research and Teaching

    Chapter 9. Xiqiao Wang: Writing About Where We Are From: Writing Across Languages, Genres and Spaces

    Wenhao Diao: Afterword

    Index

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