Schwab, Emily

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Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication
    Building From Connection, Care, And Curiosity: Towards A Critically Student-Centered Adult English For Speakers Of Other Languages Pedagogy
    (2019-01-01) Schwab, Emily Rose
    This dissertation examines the literacy and language practices educators and adult immigrant learners engaged to make sense of English in a community-based English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) class. By taking a grounded approach to understanding adult immigrant students’ collective literacy and language meaning making, the author argues for a focus on approaches to adult ESOL that build from students’ lives and inquiries. Specifically basing her analysis in the sociopolitical context of the US, the author explicitly calls for a pedagogy that resists persistent xenophobic and nativist national trends by supporting the wellbeing of students and honoring their intellectual legacies. Utilizing data collected from a year-long practitioner inquiry study, the author details her process of mediating her own perspectives on language teaching with those of her students to formulate an approach that represented both students’ interests and teachers’ commitments. Through an analysis of her own teaching and students’ learning, the author posits a model for critically student-centered teaching in adult ESOL settings that foregrounds connection, care, and curiosity. The author postulates that by seeing students’ relationships both in and out of class as sources of learning, by making concerns about students’ welfare central to class learning, and by approaching learners as fellow language investigators, adult ESOL teachers can provide a learning experience founded upon what students want from their English classes and supportive of students’ endeavors beyond language learning.
  • Publication
    An Inquiry Approach to Understanding Students’ Learning Goals in an Adult English for Speakers of Other Languages Classroom
    (2019-04-01) Schwab, Emily
    This paper seeks to expand discussions about identifying students’ learning aspirations in adult English for Speakers of Other Languages classes in the United States. By critically examining the process of ascertaining students’ learning goals and dreams for the future in one adult ESOL class, the author explores how an inquiry approach to this process opened space for centering students in class learning design and the implications it has for complicating researchers’ understandings of forming curriculum around the reasons students expressed for coming to class. Utilizing data from a year-long practitioner inquiry project, the teacher–researcher offers a perspective on centering students’ dreams and goals as curriculum and the potential it has to augment discussions of student-generated curricula in an era of increased decentering of students’ perspectives in adult literacy education in the United States.