Jungyoon Koh, Helen Dominic, H. Elmendorf, Sarah Cowgill
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract We analyze eight letters of recommendation written by high school teachers for first-generation college students, so as to illustrate narrative strategies that can make letters more effective in providing support for students’ college applications. Amidst recent criticisms of the limited utility of letters in college admissions, we argue that they can provide valuable context to students’ applications and present data in letters that shows how teachers make their students stand out. We draw on Bakhtin’s notion of voice and Bamberg’s theory of narrative positioning to examine teachers’ portrayals of their own and their students’ voices, especially through constructed dialogue. We show that such portrayals play a key role in allowing teachers to bridge the gap between students’ personal experiences and admissions officers’ institutional expectations by positioning teachers in a supportive and authoritative role, on the levels of the storyworld and the storytelling world.
期刊介绍:
Language & Education provides a forum for the discussion of recent topics and issues in the language disciplines which have an immediate bearing upon thought and practice in education. Articles draw from their subject matter important and well-communicated implications for one or more of the following: curriculum, pedagogy or evaluation in education. The task of the Journal is to encourage language specialists and language in education researchers to organise and present their material in such a way as to highlight its educational implications, thereby influencing educational theorists and practitioners and therefore educational outcomes for individual children.