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Teaching One Moment at a Time
Disruption and Repair in the Classroom

Dawn Skorczewski

Book Jacket: 'Teaching One Moment at a TimeA revealing exploration of the issues involved in the pedagogy of writing

Based on the author's longtime experience as an instructor of composition, this book explores the "delicate negotiation" between teacher and student that determines success or failure in writing courses. Dawn Skorczewski's focus is on the role of the teacher in shaping this classroom dynamic, particularly the ways in which theoretical presuppositions and personal expectations influence the responses elicited from students. Drawing on the insights of psychoanalysis as well as recent infant research, Skorczewski argues that the teacher who recognizes the beliefs she brings to the classroom is equipped to listen to her students more carefully than the teacher who holds her beliefs so closely that she can no longer see them as beliefs.

To show how these unconscious assumptions come into play and to explain their effects, Skorczewski looks at a series of key "moments" in the life of a writing class. She examines what it means to enter a classroom and take on the role of a teacher; the challenge of leading a discussion; the art of designing effective writing assignments; the difficulties involved in evaluating student writing; the negotiation of issues of authority; and the pros and cons of self-revelation. In each case the author offers not only an analysis of the disruptions that characterize these pedagogical moments but also practical advice for dealing with them. Although informed by theory, the emphasis throughout is on real issues faced by real teachers in their writing courses.

"Teaching One Moment at a Time explores the relational implications of teaching, including the teacher's countertransference, a phenomenon that is well known in psychotherapy but largely ignored in education. The book is the most sophisticated study of the ways in which writing teachers are centrally involved with their students. . . . To the question, 'What do students want?' the answer must be, 'A teacher like Dawn Skorczewski.'"

Jeffrey Berman, author of
Empathic Teaching: Education for Life

"This book seems special and valuable to me not because of the practical suggestions (though there are some good ones), but because of the precious message I hear: 'Teaching will always bring up feelings of anxiety and unease, but at least I can offer you paths to a better more productive kind of anxiety and unease.' I need this message because I know I'll never feel satisfied or at peace about my teaching."

Peter Elbow, author of Writing Without Teachers

Dawn Skorczewski is director of composition at Emerson College and coeditor of Conflicts and Crises in the Composition Classroom.

Education / Literary Studies
168 pp.
$24.95s cloth, ISBN 978-1-55849-495-4
July 2005
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