Description

Book Synopsis

New college instructors often are advised, coached, and mentored by department professors who may not have scheduled class 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 PWP lessons here are based will support the work of the college supervisors.

Graduate teaching assistants and new instructors may not know what questions to ask 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 that critical first year as a college instructor.<

Trade Review

Here’s 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 college’s academic goals while focusing directly on the individuals in their classes—repeatedly 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!

-- Alison Taylor Fastov, former English department chair; English teacher emeritus, Georgetown Day School, Washington, DC

Students deserve graduate teaching assistants and professors with basic knowledge of learning theory and pedagogy. Planning with Purpose, written primarily from an introductory writing and speaking perspective, can be a valuable resource for scholars in math, science, and engineering. Roseboro and Marshall have laid out a guide, a roadmap useful for first-year or early-career graduate student instructors, adjuncts, lecturers, fixed-term or assistant professors. Readers can return to Planning with Purpose to write teaching philosophy statements, to prepare for an interview with a search committee, or to design a teaching demonstration. Such a teaching mentor is right here.

-- Nalova Westbrook, PhD, curriculum and instruction, The Pennsylvania State University

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter One: Preparing to Be Effective and Efficient

Chapter Two: Networking with Narratives to Cultivate Community

Chapter Three: Understanding Grammars to Negotiate Conventions

Chapter Four: Writing to Clarify Thinking

Chapter Five: Engaging Expository Writing

Chapter Six: Composing Compelling Arguments

Chapter Seven: Writing Persuasively to Impact Thinking and Behavior

Chapter Eight: Writing for Speaking and Multimodal Presentations

Afterword

Bibliography

Index

About the Contributors

About the Authors

Planning with Purpose

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    £27.00

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    RRP £30.00 – you save £3.00 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Thu 18 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by National Board Certified Teacher, author, mentor, and coach Small Roseboro Anna J., Claudia A. Marschall

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      View other formats and editions of Planning with Purpose by National Board Certified Teacher, author, mentor, and coach Small Roseboro Anna J.

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 1/5/2021 12:02:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781475858211, 978-1475858211
      ISBN10: 1475858213

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      New college instructors often are advised, coached, and mentored by department professors who may not have scheduled class 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 PWP lessons here are based will support the work of the college supervisors.

      Graduate teaching assistants and new instructors may not know what questions to ask 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 that critical first year as a college instructor.<

      Trade Review

      Here’s 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 college’s academic goals while focusing directly on the individuals in their classes—repeatedly 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!

      -- Alison Taylor Fastov, former English department chair; English teacher emeritus, Georgetown Day School, Washington, DC

      Students deserve graduate teaching assistants and professors with basic knowledge of learning theory and pedagogy. Planning with Purpose, written primarily from an introductory writing and speaking perspective, can be a valuable resource for scholars in math, science, and engineering. Roseboro and Marshall have laid out a guide, a roadmap useful for first-year or early-career graduate student instructors, adjuncts, lecturers, fixed-term or assistant professors. Readers can return to Planning with Purpose to write teaching philosophy statements, to prepare for an interview with a search committee, or to design a teaching demonstration. Such a teaching mentor is right here.

      -- Nalova Westbrook, PhD, curriculum and instruction, The Pennsylvania State University

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      Chapter One: Preparing to Be Effective and Efficient

      Chapter Two: Networking with Narratives to Cultivate Community

      Chapter Three: Understanding Grammars to Negotiate Conventions

      Chapter Four: Writing to Clarify Thinking

      Chapter Five: Engaging Expository Writing

      Chapter Six: Composing Compelling Arguments

      Chapter Seven: Writing Persuasively to Impact Thinking and Behavior

      Chapter Eight: Writing for Speaking and Multimodal Presentations

      Afterword

      Bibliography

      Index

      About the Contributors

      About the Authors

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