Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
374148 Teaching and Teacher Education 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper examines how a team of teachers in a Norwegian upper secondary school responds to, negotiates, and evaluates students' writing in and across different disciplines. The purpose is to identify discourse strategies and professional development as the teachers discuss students' texts, and to explore how the teachers develop a shared understanding of how writing relates to students' learning. The findings show how the teachers' discourse reflects an emerging understanding of how writing is both a subject-specific and interdisciplinary skill conducive to learning, but also how institutional traditions and discipline-specific concerns together allow for and constrain teachers' learning.

► Writing is a subject-specific and an interdisciplinary skill conducive to learning. ► Interdisciplinary challenges promotes professional development. ► Institutional as well as discipline traditions influence teachers' view of writing.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Social Sciences Education
Authors
, ,