ABSTRACT
This volume identifies resources, models, and specific practices for improving teacher preparation for work with second language learners. It shows how faculty positioned themselves to learn from resources, experts, preservice teachers, their own practice, and each other. The teacher education professionals leverage their experience to offer theoretical and practical insights regarding how other faculty could develop their own knowledge, improve their courses, and understand their influence on the preservice teachers they serve.
The book addresses challenges others are likely to experience while improving teacher preparation, including preservice teacher resistance, the challenge of adding to already-packed courses, the difficulty of recruiting and retaining busy faculty members, and the question of how to best frame the larger issues. The authors also address options for integrating the work of improving teacher preparation for linguistic diversity into a variety of different teacher education program designs. Finally, the book demonstrates a data-driven approach that makes this work consistent with many institutions’ mandate to produce research and to collect evidence supporting accreditation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|59 pages
Defining the Problem Space and Possibilities
part II|76 pages
Revising Courses and Developing Practices
chapter 5|20 pages
Solving Problems of Space, Time, and Knowledge
chapter 6|17 pages
Teaching Preservice Teachers How to Learn from—and about—Their Emergent Bilingual Students
part III|79 pages
Assessing Outcomes and Learning Along the Way
part IV|25 pages
Moving Forward