GENERAL
Browse by Subjects
New Releases
Coming Soon
Chases's Calendar
ACADEMIC
Textbooks
Browse by Course
Instructor's Copies
Monographs & Research
Reference
PROFESSIONAL
Education
Intelligence & Security
Library Services
Business & Leadership
Museum Studies
Music
Pastoral Resources
Psychotherapy
FREUD SET
Hardback
$128.00
Add to GoodReads
Learning from Scant Beginnings
English Professor Expertise
John V. Knapp
Although teaching is perhaps the central public activity of most university English professors, there is surprisingly little research in the specifics of expert professorial practice. Many previous studies describe, recipe-like, the end products of successful teaching, while others conflate expertise in this subject matter with pedagogical expertise. This study focuses on the moves the expert professor makes in a semester-long process of literary teaching_of a literature far removed in time and space from most undergraduates' experience_and discusses a day-to-day case study of an advanced undergraduate literature course in the writings of John Milton. By employing a 'situated learning' model explaining the incremental growth of students' knowledge and critical skills, the author details how an expert professor teaches complex works to undergraduates with no previous exposure to an author's writings. This process is generalized to describe literary learning in its particulars and the paths students must take from possessing scant knowledge about an author or historical period to their developing mastery.
Details
Details
Author
Author
University Press Copublishing Division / University of Delaware Press
Pages: 310 Trim: 6¾ x 9¾
978-1-61149-091-6 • Hardback • May 2008 •
$128.00
• (£98.00)
Subjects:
Literary Criticism / Reference
,
Education / Teaching Methods & Materials / General
,
Education / Higher
,
Education / Reference
John V. Knapp
is professor of English at Northern Illinois University.
Learning from Scant Beginnings
English Professor Expertise
Hardback
$128.00
Summary
Summary
Although teaching is perhaps the central public activity of most university English professors, there is surprisingly little research in the specifics of expert professorial practice. Many previous studies describe, recipe-like, the end products of successful teaching, while others conflate expertise in this subject matter with pedagogical expertise. This study focuses on the moves the expert professor makes in a semester-long process of literary teaching_of a literature far removed in time and space from most undergraduates' experience_and discusses a day-to-day case study of an advanced undergraduate literature course in the writings of John Milton. By employing a 'situated learning' model explaining the incremental growth of students' knowledge and critical skills, the author details how an expert professor teaches complex works to undergraduates with no previous exposure to an author's writings. This process is generalized to describe literary learning in its particulars and the paths students must take from possessing scant knowledge about an author or historical period to their developing mastery.
Details
Details
University Press Copublishing Division / University of Delaware Press
Pages: 310 Trim: 6¾ x 9¾
978-1-61149-091-6 • Hardback • May 2008 •
$128.00
• (£98.00)
Subjects:
Literary Criticism / Reference
,
Education / Teaching Methods & Materials / General
,
Education / Higher
,
Education / Reference
Author
Author
John V. Knapp
is professor of English at Northern Illinois University.
ALSO AVAILABLE
NEWSLETTERS