Teaching English in Rural Communities: Toward a Critical Rural English Pedagogy

Awards:   Winner of Edward B. Fry 2023 Book Award 2023
Author:   Robert Petrone ,  Allison Wynhoff Olsen
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9781475849165


Pages:   182
Publication Date:   15 April 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Teaching English in Rural Communities: Toward a Critical Rural English Pedagogy


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Awards

  • Winner of Edward B. Fry 2023 Book Award 2023

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Robert Petrone ,  Allison Wynhoff Olsen
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Dimensions:   Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.70cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9781475849165


ISBN 10:   1475849168
Pages:   182
Publication Date:   15 April 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Foreword: Valerie Kinloch, PhD Acknowledgements Preface: Robert Petrone & Allison Wynhoff Olsen Part One: Why a Critical Rural English Pedagogy? Chapter One—Moving Toward a Critical Rural English Pedagogy Robert Petrone & Allison Wynhoff Olsen Part Two: Inside Rural English Classrooms Chapter Two—We Ain’t Much to Look At: Teaching about Rurality through Literary Texts Alli Behrens, Robert Petrone, & Allison Wynhoff Olsen Chapter Three—Who has a “Place” in Place-Based Pedagogy?: Indigenizing Rural English Education Melissa Horner, Robert Petrone, & Allison Wynhoff Olsen Chapter Four—Linking Local Communities to Critical Rural English Pedagogies Elizabeth Reierson, Catherine Dorian, Robert Petrone, & Allison Wynhoff Olsen Part Three: Moving Forward Chapter Five—Re-thinking Race/ism & Rurality in English Education Robert Petrone, Melissa Horner, & Allison Wynhoff Olsen Chapter Six—Opportunities & Challenges in Moving Toward a Critical Rural English Pedagogy Robert Petrone & Allison Wynhoff Olsen Appendix A: Assignment Sheet for Textbook Entry Appendix B: Student Sample Index

Reviews

"As an African American educator who grew up in a rural setting and whose family history is tied to the rural Midwest, I welcome a study like Teaching English in Rural Communities. Petrone and Wynhoff Olsen don't write about rural folks; they write with them and for them in this enlightening work. Offering an approach to teaching English to rural students that helps them to ""critically engage"" and confront constructions of rurality that demean and devalue their own experiences and identity, this book shows us the ways that rural English teachers are already empowering their students to see themselves as vital and important thinkers, acters, and citizens. In a cultural moment when the rural/urban divide seems as profound as ever and rural spaces are dismissed as nowheres whose only value lies in what they can provide for cities, Petrone and Wynhoff Olsen emphasize a place-based pedagogy that encourages rural students to develop a critical awareness of their own identities, the places where they live, and how both are perceived culturally. Most importantly to me, Petrone and Wynhoff Olsen embrace the diversity of rural experience, highlighting decolonizing pedagogies that recognize the sovereignty of indigenous people and their land and acknowledging the existence of BIPOC folks in rural spaces. Resisting the conflation of whiteness and rurality, this study demonstrates the ways that Critical Rural English Pedagogy can provide a powerful challenge to popular conceptions of rurality through the deployment of a critically-engaged, decolonizing English curricula.--David Todd Lawrence, Associate Professor of English and American Culture and Difference, University of St. Thomas, and author of When They Blew the Levee: Race, Politics, and Community in Pinhook, Missouri Teaching English in Rural Communities comprises first and foremost some great narratives of pedagogies in place. Bringing together theories of critical literacy, race and place conscious pedagogies the authors provide a series of wonderful nuanced accounts of pedagogical practices which attend to who and where people are - teachers, students and the communities. This is a book to share with English teacher educators, teachers and literacy researchers who are deliberately working towards racial and spatial justice and with care for the planet.--Barbara Comber, Interim Dean of Research, Education Futures, University of South Australia and Author of Literacy, Place, and Pedagogies of Possibility Teaching English in Rural Communities offers insights and explorations into what is often left out or omitted from conversations on educational reform--Rural Communities. Relying on Critical Rural English as a way to teach, learn and grow, co-authors Robert Petrone and Allison Wynhoff Olsen amplify the voices of educators as well as students in rural communities in Montana in an effort to better understand the complexity of such schooling settings as well as to offer a more transformative path forward for all involved. Such an exploration is complex; however, this contribution offers concrete lessons as well as observations of what it means to teach and learn at the intersections of race, racism, and rurality or rural education.--Timothy San Pedro, Associate Professor of Multicultural & Equity Studies at The Ohio State University and author of Education in Movement Spaces: Standing Rock to Chicago Freedom Square and Applying Indigenous Research Methods: Storying with Peoples and Communities"


As an African American educator who grew up in a rural setting and whose family history is tied to the rural Midwest, I welcome a study like Teaching English in Rural Communities. Petrone and Wynhoff Olsen don't write about rural folks; they write with them and for them in this enlightening work. Offering an approach to teaching English to rural students that helps them to critically engage and confront constructions of rurality that demean and devalue their own experiences and identity, this book shows us the ways that rural English teachers are already empowering their students to see themselves as vital and important thinkers, acters, and citizens. In a cultural moment when the rural/urban divide seems as profound as ever and rural spaces are dismissed as nowheres whose only value lies in what they can provide for cities, Petrone and Wynhoff Olsen emphasize a place-based pedagogy that encourages rural students to develop a critical awareness of their own identities, the places where they live, and how both are perceived culturally. Most importantly to me, Petrone and Wynhoff Olsen embrace the diversity of rural experience, highlighting decolonizing pedagogies that recognize the sovereignty of indigenous people and their land and acknowledging the existence of BIPOC folks in rural spaces. Resisting the conflation of whiteness and rurality, this study demonstrates the ways that Critical Rural English Pedagogy can provide a powerful challenge to popular conceptions of rurality through the deployment of a critically-engaged, decolonizing English curricula.--David Todd Lawrence, Associate Professor of English and American Culture and Difference, University of St. Thomas, and author of When They Blew the Levee: Race, Politics, and Community in Pinhook, Missouri Teaching English in Rural Communities comprises first and foremost some great narratives of pedagogies in place. Bringing together theories of critical literacy, race and place conscious pedagogies the authors provide a series of wonderful nuanced accounts of pedagogical practices which attend to who and where people are - teachers, students and the communities. This is a book to share with English teacher educators, teachers and literacy researchers who are deliberately working towards racial and spatial justice and with care for the planet.--Barbara Comber, Interim Dean of Research, Education Futures, University of South Australia and Author of Literacy, Place, and Pedagogies of Possibility Teaching English in Rural Communities offers insights and explorations into what is often left out or omitted from conversations on educational reform--Rural Communities. Relying on Critical Rural English as a way to teach, learn and grow, co-authors Robert Petrone and Allison Wynhoff Olsen amplify the voices of educators as well as students in rural communities in Montana in an effort to better understand the complexity of such schooling settings as well as to offer a more transformative path forward for all involved. Such an exploration is complex; however, this contribution offers concrete lessons as well as observations of what it means to teach and learn at the intersections of race, racism, and rurality or rural education.--Timothy San Pedro, Associate Professor of Multicultural & Equity Studies at The Ohio State University and author of Education in Movement Spaces: Standing Rock to Chicago Freedom Square and Applying Indigenous Research Methods: Storying with Peoples and Communities


Author Information

Robert Petrone is associate professor of literacy education and critical youth studies at the University of Missouri. His research focuses on the intersections of learning and literacy in youth cultures, textual representations and theoretical reconceptualizations of adolescence/adolescents, and English (teacher) education. He is coauthor (with Sophia Sarigianides and Mark A. Lewis) of Re-thinking the “Adolescent” in Adolescent Literacy. Allison Wynhoff Olsen is associate professor of English education, writing, and linguistics at Montana State University, where she is also a director of the Yellowstone Writing Project. Her current research includes explorations of rural English teaching, with a focus on learning over time, teachers’ emotional strain, and pre-service teacher preparations; examining intersections between talk and writing; and a development of a particular kind of argument, a listening argument.

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