Contents: P. Prior, Foreword. Preface. Games and Frames: When Writing Is More Than Writing. The Beginnings of Change: Learning and Teaching Undergraduate Academic Literacy Games. Stepping Into the Profession: Writing Games in Master's Programs. Redefining the Self: The Unsettling Doctoral Program Game. Juggling and Balancing Games of Bilingual Faculty. Bending the Rules. The Paradoxical Effort After Coherence in Academic Writing Games. Appendices.
Christine Pears Casanave
"Writing Games should be useful and interesting to a wide
audience...Graduate students will be drawn to Casanave's insights
into the intricate connections between their writing practices and
departmental politics. Composition-rhetoric scholars will find
useful models for the articulation of identity in the writing
process and the role of reflection in that process. Those
interested in cross-disciplinary study and learning community
classes will find her examination of students' and teachers'
approaches to writing tasks in a variety of disciplines
illuminating."
—Journal of College Writing"From Casanave's opening chapter
discussing the books framework to her conclusion, the book is rich
in insights about the nature of litercy practices among
undergraduate students, Master's students, doctoral students, and
faculty."
—Studies in Second Language Aquisition"Writing Games is well worth
reading for a number of reasons. Qualitative researchers will find
Casanave's work compelling as she demonstrates that the results
from case study research need not be localized to a particular
study and can be interwoven to create convincing arguments and the
ground for other case studies. Composition researchers and teachers
will also find her work a corrective to the implied promise in some
composition courses that the skills of academic writing can be
conveyed in one or even several undergraduate courses. Finally,
literacy researchers, especially those in English for Academic
Purposes, will appreciate a study so grounded in the research as
well as in data that focuses on the experiences of non-native
speakers...I recommend Writing Games. It is a good academic
read."
—Anthropology & Education Quarterly"The many voices of Writing
Games produce a rich, complex view of academic writing....The book
succeeds in its goals. It demystifies much about the human
experience of learning, writing, and life in the academy. At the
same time, it expands the grounds for dialogic, practice-oriented
accounts of academic writing and enculturation. It is a book that I
greatly admire for all it has achieved."
—Paul Prior
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, From the Foreword"I
don't know of any other work that has attempted to pull together in
one place so much research on literacy (from novice to expert) in
higher education, analyze it in such a close and critically
constructive way, and make it so highly accessible to
readers....Readers will appreciate its depth and breadth of
coverage and the remarkable clarity of the author's prose style.
Casanave has obviously mastered the writing game herself."
—Diane Belcher
Ohio State University"I can imagine people picking up this book,
reading different parts of it at different times, reflecting on it,
seeing themselves in it, and understanding their own practices as
students, teachers, teacher educators, and participants in various
communities of academic literacy practices....This book definitely
contributes significantly to various fields such as applied
linguistics, composition studies, and literacy education...[and] to
the professional development of teachers and researchers of
academic literacy."
—Paul Kei Matsuda
University of New Hampshire
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |