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| Appendices |
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Appendix
II: Further Reading or Visiting
These
works are available for consultation and/or loan from the Teaching Resource
Center, Hotel D, 24 East Range, on the Internet, or from the U.Va. library
system. Videotaped workshops on many of these topics are also available
for loan, though not listed here.
GENERAL INFORMATION: DIVERSITY AND MULTICULTURALISM IN THE CLASSROOM
Adams, Maurianne, Lee Anne Bell and Pat Griffin. Ed. Teaching for Diversity
and Social
Justice.
NY; London: Routledge, 1997.
American Association
of Colleges & Universities. DiversityWeb: An Interactive Resource
Hub for
Higher Education. [updated 23 June 2003; cited 5 April 2004]. Available
from
http://www.diversityweb.org/index.cfm.
Border, L.L.B.
and Nancy Van Note Chism. Teaching for Diversity. San Francisco:
Jossey-
Bass,
1992. (TRC)
"Diversity/Multiculturalism."
Black binder of articles. (TRC)
Diversity
in the Classroom. Videocassette. Center for Teaching and Learning.
U of North
Carolina,
Chapel Hill.
Frederick,
Peter. "Walking on Eggs: Mastering the Dreaded Diversity Discussion."
College
Teaching
43.3 (1995): 83-92.
Hurtado, Sylvia,
Jeffrey Milem, Alma Clayton-Pederson and Walter Allen. 1999. Enacting
Diverse
Learning Environments: Improving the Climate for Racial/Ethnic Diversity
in
Higher
Education. Washington, DC: ASHE-ERIC Higher Education Report, 1999.
(TRC)
hooks, bell.
Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom. NY;
London:
Routledge,
1994.
Lutzker, Marilyn.
Multiculturalism in the College Classroom: A Handbook of Strategies
and
Resources
for Faculty. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1995. (TRC)
Race in
the Classroom: The Multiplicity of Experience. Videocassette. The
Derek Bok
Center
for Teaching and Learning and the Office of Race Relations and Minority
Affairs, Harvard
U.
Schoem, David,
et al. Multicultural Teaching in the University. Westport, CT:
Praeger, 1995.
Contains
chapters on teaching courses on diversity as well as incorporating
multicultural
elements into traditional courses such as math, composition, architecture
or biology.
See especially, "Questions and Responses on Multicultural Teaching
and
Conflict
in the Classroom," 293-311.
Wlodkowski,
Raymond and Margery Ginsberg. Diversity & Motivation: Culturally
Responsive
Teaching.
San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1995.
Valuing
Diversity 3: Communicating Across Cultures. Videocassette. San Rafael,
CA:
Griggs
Productions, 1992.
Specific
Cultures
Collett, Jonathan. "Reaching African American Students in the Classroom."
In To Improve
the Academy:
Resources for Student Faculty and Institutional Development 9,
(Stillwater,
OK: New Forums, 1990), 177-88. (TRC)
Evans, Nancy,
and Heidi Levine. "Perspectives on Sexual Orientation." In Evolving
Theoretical
Perspectives on Students. New Directions for Student Services 51 (1990):
49-58.
Locke, Don.
C. Increasing Multicultural Understanding: A Comprehensive Model.
2nd ed.
Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage, 1998. Designed for the needs of counselors, the book
provides
history and background information on nine US cultural groups: African
Americans,
the Amish, Native-Americans, Japanese-Americans, Chinese-Americans,
Vietnamese
in the United States, Korean-Americans, Mexican-Americans, and Puerto- Rican-Americans.
Tierney, William
G. "Building Academic Communities of Difference: Gays, Lesbians,
and
Bisexuals
on Campus." Change (1992): 41-46. (TRC)
Tips for
Teachers: Encouraging Students in a Racially Diverse Classroom. [updated
18
March
2002; cited 25 March 2004]. Available from
http://bokcenter.harvard.edu/docs/TFTrace.html.
Wall, Vernon,
and Jamie Washington. "Understanding Gay and Lesbian Students of
Color."
Beyond
Tolerance: Gays, Lesbians, and Bisexuals on Campus (1991): 67-78.
This
article
is oriented toward the needs of college counselors, but it is one of the
few
resources
available that discusses the differing ethnic perspectives of lesbian
and gay
students.
(TRC)
COOPERATIVE & COLLABORATIVE LEARING
Bonwell, Charles C. and James A. Eison. Active Learning: Creating Excitement
in the
Classroom.
Washington, DC: George Washington University, 1991. (TRC)
"Cooperative
Learning." Black binder of articles. (TRC)
Cuseo, Joseph.
"Cooperative Learning: A Pedagogy for Diversity." Cooperative
Learning and
College
Teaching 3 (1992): 2-6. (TRC)
Davis, Barbara
G. Tools for Teaching. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1993. (TRC)
Johnson, David
W., Roger T. Johnson, and Karl A. Smith. 1991. Active Learning:
Cooperation
in the College Classroom. Edina, MN: Interaction, 1991. (TRC)
Johnson, David
W., Roger T. Johnson and Karl A. Smith.1991. Cooperative Learning:
Increasing
College Faculty Instructional Productivity. Washington, DC: ERIC
Clearinghouse
on Higher Education. (TRC)
Leffler, Phyllis.
Cooperative Learning: Does It Work for Primary Research?video.
Charlottesville,
VA: University of Virginia, 1997. (TRC)
Millis, Barbara
J. and Phillip Cottell Jr. Cooperative Learning for Higher Education
Faculty.
Phoenix,
AZ: Oryx, 1998.
Sarasin, L.C.
Learning Style Perspectives. Madison, WI: Atwood Publishing, 1999.
Smith, Karl.
Videotaped workshops on cooperative learning. Charlottesville,
VA: University
of Virginia,
1992-1993. (TRC)
DIVERSITY IN SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING AND MATH
Office of the Dean of the College at Brown University. Achieving Gender
Equity in Science
Classrooms:
A Guide for Faculty. [Published 1996; accessed 31 March 2004.]
Available
from http://www.brown.edu/Administration/Dean_of_the_College/homepginfo
/equity
/Equity_handbook.html.
McDermott,
Lillian C., Mark L. Rosenquist, and Emily H. van Zee. "Strategies
to Improve the
Performance
of Minority Students in the Sciences." In Teaching Minority Students.
New
Directions
for Teaching and Learning 16 (1983): 59-72.
Rosser, Sue
V. Female-Friendly Science: Applying Women's Studies Methods and
Theories
to Attract Students. New York: Pergamon, 1990.
Rosser, Sue
V. Female-Friendly Science. Videocassette. Charlottesville, VA: University
of
Virginia,
1993. (TRC)
Rosser, Sue
V. Re-Engineering Female-Friendly Science. New York: Teacher's
College
Press,
1997. (TRC)
Tobias, Sheila.
They're not Dumb, They're Different: Stalking the Second Tier. Tucson,
AZ:
Research
Co., 1990. See "The Female Factor" (69-70). This book does not
address in
detail
the issue of women in science, but it provides a helpful analysis of how
students
feel about
science courses, and why they abandon science for other fields. (TRC)
Yu, Shirley
L. "Women's Motivation and strategy use in College Science Classes."
Journal
of Staff,
Program, & Organization Development 16 (1999): 93-101.
GENDER
Belenky, Mary F., et al. Women's Ways of Knowing: The Development of
Self, Voice, and
Mind.
New York: Harper, 1986. See particularly Chapter 10: "Connected Teaching"
(214-29). (TRC)
Chism, N. V.,
J. Cano, and A.S. Pruitt. "Teaching in a Diverse Environment: Knowledge
and Skills
Needed by TAs." In Teaching Assistant Training in the 1990s. New
Directions for Teaching
and Learning 39 (1989): 23-35. (TRC)
Healy, Patrick.
"A Proselytizer for Teaching." The Chronicle of Higher Education
(1995)
(TRC)
Kramer, Martin,
and Stephen S. Weiner. Dialogues for Diversity: Community and Ethnicity
on Campus.
Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing, 1994.
Krupnick, Catherine
G. "Women and Men in the Classroom: Inequality and Its Remedies."
On Teaching
and Learning 1 (1985): 18-25. (TRC)
Pearson, Carol
S., Donna L. Shavlik, and Judith G. Touchton, ed. Educating the Majority:
Women
Challenge Tradition in Higher Education. New York: Macmillan, 1989.
Includes essays
on Black, Latina, Asian American, Native-American, reentry, lesbian, and
disabled
female students, and on women and science. (TRC)
Sandler, Bernice
Resnick, Lisa A. Silverberg and Roberta M. Hall.1996. The Chilly
Classroom
Climate: a Guide to Improve the Education of Women. Washington, DC
:
National
Assn. for Women in Education.
Tannen, Deborah.
"Teachers' Classroom Strategies Should Recognize that Men and
Women
Use Language Differently." Chronicle of Higher Education (1991):
B1, B3.
(TRC)
"Teaching
Women." Black binder of articles. (TRC)
Tips for
Teachers: Sensitivity to Women in the Contemporary Classroom. [updated
18
March
2002; cited 25 March 2004]. Available from
http://bokcenter.harvard.edu/docs/TFTwomen.html.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
Responding
to Communication and Writing Skills
Brookes, A. and P. Grundy. Writing for Study Purposes: A Teacher's
Guide to Developing
Individual
Writing Skills. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990.
Capossela,
Toni-Lee. The Critical Writing Workshop: Designing Writing Assignments
to
Foster
Critical Thinking. Portsmouth, NH: Boynton/Cook, 1993.
Chastain, Kenneth.
Developing Second-Language Skills: Theory and Practice, 3rd ed. New
York:
Harcourt Brace, 1988. Chastain's book discusses students' acquisition
of foreign
languages,
but many of his ideas apply also to the concerns of ESOL students. See
"Writing"
(chap. 9), "Primary Guidelines" (chap. 12), and "Error
Correction" (chap. 13).
(TRC)
D'Errico, Jon.
Responding to Student Writing: Mathematics, Sciences, and Engineering.
Teaching
Workshop Video. Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia, 1998.
(TRC)
Raimes, Ann.
Grammar Troublespots: An Editing Guide for Students, 2nd ed. New
York: St.
Martin's, 1992. Designed for students. Includes flow charts for checking
grammatical
constructions. (TRC)
Sigsbee, David
L., Bruce W. Speck and Bruce Maylath. Approaches to Teaching Non-
Native
English Speakers Across the Curriculum. New Directions for Teaching and
Learning
70 (Summer 1997).
Walvoord, Barbara
E. Helping Students Write Well: A Guide for Teachers in All Disciplines.
2nd ed.
NY: MLA, 1986.
Williams, Joseph.
Style: Ten Lessons in Clarity and Grace, 3rd ed. Glenview, IL:
Scott,
Foresman,
1989. See chap. 1: "The Grammar of Clarity." (TRC)
Understanding
Other Cultures
Levine, Deena R., Jim Baxter and Piper McNulty. The Culture Puzzle:
Cross-Cultural
Communication
for English as a Second Language. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall
Regents,
1987.
Lou, Ray. "Model
Minority? Getting Behind the Veil." Change (1989): 16-17.
(TRC)
Wenzhong, Hu
and Cornelius L. Grove. Encountering the Chinese: A Guide for Americans.
Yarmouth,
ME: Intercultural Press, 1991. (TRC)
Wlodkowski,
Raymond and Margery Ginsberg. Diversity and Motivation. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass,
1995.
INFORMATION FOR INTERNATIONAL TAS
Althen, Gary. Manual for Foreign Teaching Assistants. 2nd ed. Iowa
City: University of Iowa,
1988.
(with an appendix for foreign faculty). (TRC)
Barmes, Gregory
A. The International Student's Guide to the American University.
Lincolnwood,
IL: National Textbook, 1991.
Papajohn, Dean.
Toward Speaking Excellence. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan P,
1998.
Pica, Teresa,
et al. Teaching Matters: Skills and Strategies for International Teaching
Assistants.
New York: Newbury House, 1980. (TRC)
MENTORING
Hall, Roberta M., and Bernice R. Sandler. Academic Mentoring for Women
Students and
Faculty:
A New Look at an Old Way to Get Ahead. Washington, DC: Association
of
American
Colleges, 1983. (TRC)
Luna, Gaye
and Deborah L. Cullen. Empowering the Faculty: Mentoring Redirected
and
Renewed.
Washington, DC: ASHE-ERIC Higher Education Reports, 1995. (TRC)
SEXUAL ASSAULT & HARASSMENT
Faculty Facts. Institute for Substance Abuse. Associate Director
for Prevention: 924-5276.
This interactive
computer program is available at the TRC, the Women's Center, and
various
other departments throughout the university, including Alderman Library.
It
provides
information on alcohol and drug use and sexual assault, including effects,
identification,
federal, state, and university laws, and local resources.
Handbook
for Survivors: A Guide to Surviving Sexual Assault. Charlottesville,
VA: U. of
Virginia,
1999. Designed for the student, this handbook contains lists of university
and
community
organizations and phone numbers. (Women's Center and TRC)
Related handbooks
include Sexual Assault & Harassment, Dating/Domestic Violence and
Stalking:
Ways to Create a Safer University of Virginia Community and Sexual Assault,
Dating
Violence and Stalking: Your Rights, Your Responsibilities. (Women's
Center,
Office
of the Dean of Students in Peabody Hall, Office of Women's Studies, and
the
TRC. Many
of these are also available online at:
http://sexualassault.virginia.edu/publications.htm)
"Sexual
Assault/Sexual Harassment/Substance Abuse." Black binder of articles
and
University
information. (TRC)
Sexual Harassment:
How to Identify it, Report it, and Stop it. Revised edition, University
of
Virginia,
1993. The brief sections "Ask Yourself These Questions" and
"What Can I Do
to Stop
It?" can help students figure out if they have been sexually harassed
and what
they can
do to prevent it. (Office of Equal Opportunity, Women's Center, and TRC.
Available
online at http://www.virginia.edu/eop/harass.html)
STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
Barnett, Marva A. and Candace Cone. Moving Beyond Disabilities in Foreign
Language
Courses:
video. Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia, 1995. (TRC)
"Characteristics
of Students Who May Have Disabilities." U.Va. Learning Needs and
Evaluation
Center, 1991. (LNEC and the TRC)
Hacker, Diana.
The Bedford Handbook for Writers, 6th ed. NY: St. Martin's, 2002.
The
sections
on "Spelling and Mechanics," tips for ESOL writers, and the
final "Basic
Grammar
Index" would be helpful references for international students or
ones with
spelling
or substitution problems.
Mangrum, Charles.
"Teaching Learning Disabled Students in the College Classroom."
Chap.
14 from
College and the Learning Disabled Student: Program Development,
Implementation
and Selection. Philadelphia: Harcourt Brace, 1988: 200-207.
(Education
Library and TRC)
Manning, Kathleen.
"Expectations and Surprises in Learning to Teach a Member of the
Deaf
Culture."
Journal of Excellence in College Teaching 5 (1994), 77-88.
O'Hearn, Carolyn.
"Recognizing the Learning Disabled College Writer." Latest
Developments.
Learning Disabilities Special Interest Group. Fall 1990. (TRC)
Raphael, Emily.
"Some Notes on Teaching Students with Disabilities." The
English
Instructor's
Sourcebook for Running a Successful Discussion. Ed. Marjorie Raley.
Charlottesville,
VA: University of Virginia., 1992. 62-67. (TRC)
Sandperl, Molly.
"Teaching Students with Learning Disabilities." TA Talk
(Winter 1990): 3-4.
(TRC)
University
of Virginia. A Guide to Accommodating Students with Disabilities. [updated
25
November
2003; cited 24 March 2004]. Available from http://www.virginia.edu/vpsa/ada-
fac.html.
See "Suggestions for Classroom Accommodations."
-----. Guide
to the University of Virginia for Students with Disabilities. (1997-98).
University of
Virginia.
This student handbook describes the accessibility of parking, health services,
dining
services, computer labs, fine arts locations, etc. If you require your
students to
meet outside
the classroom, such as for a concert or to work in a computer lab, you
may wish
to consult the handbook to check on accessibility. (Available online at
http://www.virginia.edu/studenthealth/lnec/studenthandbook.html).
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