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Books

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Dr. Paul S. Kaplan, Department of Psychology, authored
the following books:
This third edition of A Child's Odyssey, published
by Wadsworth, 2000, provides a strong foundation in the classical research
on child development with a focus on practial issues and problems. It
contains many examples that illustrate how children perceive the world
and how children both are affected by and influence their environment.
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Adolescence, published by Houghton
Mifflin, 2003, presents adolescence in a contextual manner, including
extensive coverage of the family, peer group, school experience, the media,
and culture. Emphasis is placed on the individual adolescent positively
and actively coping with challenges.
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Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice, Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, co-translated and co-wrote the introduction (with Charles Jernigan) of the following book:
Aminta: A Pastoral Play(New York: Italica Press 2000)
This volume was awarded the prestigious Italian Monselice "Diego Valeri" prize for translation in spring 2002.
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Mary Ann Short, Associate Director for Administration of the Professional Education Program, has authored the following young adult novel about friendship, faith and the interdependence of life:
A Friend Indeed (AuthorHouse, 1997, 2002)
Ms. Short's book is included among the lists of recommended readings by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) Humane Education Department, and Book Adventure.org* (with the International Reading Association).
* Book Adventure.org is a website designed to encourage students in grades K-8 to read more frequently and to improve their comprehension. The site is sponsored by Houghton Mifflin Publishers, the Sylvan Learning Foundation, and the Sylvan Learning Centers.
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Angel (AuthorHouse, October 2004)
Ms. Short's second children's book is a beautifully illustrated tale that
speaks to a mother's everlasting love for her child that survives against
all odds. It is a story about miracles, and the faith the enables us to
both believe without seeing, and to see because we believe. Angel
is also included in the Book Adventure.org recommended reading list. |
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Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice, Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, has co-translated the following book.
Angels of Youth(Xenos Books,2000)
Translated by Carol Lettieri and Irene Marchegiani Jones. Angels Of Youth is a translation of Ceres, Fontanella's ninth volume of poetry, originally published in Italian by Caramanica Editore in1996. The Italian edition garnered two distinguished poetry awards and received praise in both Europe and the United States. Devised with the English-speaking readership in mind, the current translation has subtly reorganized the original volume.
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Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice, Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, has co-translated the following book.
Blood Autumn.Autunno di sangue. (Bordighera Press, 2006)
Translated to the Italian by Elisa Biagini, Luigi Bonaffini, Ned Condini, Luigi Fontanella, and Irene Marchegiani. Daneila Gioseffi's Blood Autumn/Autunno Di Sangue features selected poems and new work by the poet in both the original English and Italian translation.
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Sarah Jourdain, Assistant Professor and Director of the Foreign Languages Education Program, has co-authored the following French textbook for first year college students:
Chez Nous: Branché sur le monde francophone (2nd edition), Prentice Hall.
For more information, please visit the Chez Nous website at: http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/cheznous/
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Dorit H. Kaufman, Director of the Professional Education Program and Professor of Linguistics, and JoAnn Crandall have co-edited the
following book: Content-Based Instruction in Higher Education Settings
(Alexandria, VA:
TESOL,
2002) Content-based instruction
(CBI)
challenges
ESOL
teachers to teach language through specialist content in
institutional settings. This volume addresses
CBI negotiation
between
ESOL
teachers and subject specialists in higher education. Writers
document and evaluate courses that support the subject discipline
and meet the language needs of
EFL and
ESL
learners.
For more information, please visit the TESOL website at:
http://www.tesol.org/s_tesol/sec_document.asp?TrackID=&SID=1&DID=1837 &CID=283&VID=2&RTID=0&IDQS=&Taxonomy=False&specialSearch=False |
Dorit H. Kaufman, Director of the Professional Education Program and Professor of Linguistics, and JoAnn Crandall have co-edited the following book: Content-Based Instruction in Primary and Secondary School Settings (Alexandria, VA: TESOL, 2005) Changing paradigms and new standards across disciplines have challenged teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) and educators in all subject areas to collaboratively develop content-based curricula and assessment for English language learners. This volume highlights the wide range of Content-based Instruction (CBI) paradigms that teachers in ESL and EFL contexts are using in primary and secondary schools in the U.S. and in other countries. For more information, please visit the TESOL website at:
http://www.tesol.org/s_tesol/sec_document.asp?CID=283&DID=4129
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Dr. Bongsoon Zubay, former Director of SUTEC, is author of the book,
Creating the Ethical School: A Book of Case Studies. Teachers College
Press, November 2004.
Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice,
Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, has co-authored the following
book with Francesca Italiano.
Crescendo! (Heinle, 2006 - Second Edition)
Crescendo! is an intermediate Italian program that promotes the development
of all four skills, encouraging the acquisition of vocabulary. This fully
revised edition provides a complete review of Italian grammar within a rich
cultural framework that offers a vast and varied image of Italy today.
Crescendo! emphasizes learning language in context through the extensive
use of authentic materials.
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Georges Eugene Fouron, Professor, Department of Africana Studies, has
co-authored the following book:
Georges Woke Up Laughing: Long-Distance Nationalism and the Search for Home
Combining history, autobiography, and ethnography, Georges Woke Up Laughing provides a portrait of the Haitian experience of migration to the United States that illuminates the phenomenon of long-distance nationalism, the voicelessness of certain citizens, and the impotency of government in an increasingly globalized world.
Arguing that governments of many countries today have almost no power to implement policies that will assist their citizens, the authors provide insights into the ongoing sociological, anthropological, and political effects of globalization.
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Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice, Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, wrote the following book of selected poetry:
La vita in cerchio (Rome: Stango 2004)
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Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice,
Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, has edited the following book
by Luigi Fontanella.
Land of Time (Chelsea Editions - 2006)
Land of Time is a bilingual anthology of selected poems by Luigi
Fontanella, from 1972 to 2003.
Irene Marchegiani edited the volume and co-translated into English the
sections titled Tentative Evidence, Angeles of Youth, and Azul. Luigi
Fontanella is one of the most prominent voices in contemporary Italian
poetry.
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Patricia A. Dunn, Associate Professor of English Education, has
authored
the following book:
Learning Re-Abled: The Learning Disability Controversy and Composition
Studies
Learning Re-Abled examines the many issues that contribute to the learning
disability controversy and provides historical perspectives on LD and
composition, showing how the two fields complement and conflict with each
other. It is a challenge to broaden and enrich the learning of all
students and teachers by recognizing ways of knowing that will allow the
learning disabled to become re-abled.
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Bruce Stewart, Lecturer of Mathematics Education, has co-authored
(with
J.M.T. Thompson) the following book:
Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos : Second Edition
Nonlinear dynamics and chaos involves the study of apparent random
happenings within a system or process. The subject has wide
applications
within mathematics, engineering, physics, and other physical sciences.
Covering one of the fastest growing areas of applied mathematics, this
book
is a fully updated edition of the highly regarded first edition.
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Professor Bruce Bashford of the English Department is the author of the
book, Oscar Wilde: the Critic as Humanist. Fairleigh Dickinson
University
Press, 1999.
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Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice, Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, has co-authored the following book with Francesca Italiano. Ancillary material including a video, website program, workbook, lab audio manual, and assessment package are also available.
Percorsi. L'Italia attraverso la lingua e la cultura (Prentice Hall - 2007)
Percorsi. L'Italia attraverso la lingua e la cultura (Pathways: Italy through it language and culture) is an introductory program for beginning Italian College courses. Percorsi is designed to provide beginning learners with a variety of tools to develop their communicative competence in the four major language skills —listening, speaking, reading, and writing and to acquire familiarity with Italian culture. All of the features in Percorsi have been carefully designed to support two key aspects of the language acquisition process: language comprehension and language production.
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Larry Frohman, Director of the Social Studies Teacher Education Program, has authored the following book:
Poor Relief and Welfare in Germany from the Reformation to World War I (Cambridge University Press, July 2008).
This account of poor relief, charity, and social welfare in Germany from the Reformation through World War I integrates historical narrative and theoretical analysis of such issues as social discipline, governmentality, gender, religion, and state-formation. It analyzes the changing cultural frameworks through which the poor came to be considered as needy; the institutions, strategies, and practices devised to assist, integrate, and discipline these populations; and the political alchemy through which the needs of the individual were reconciled with those of the community. While the Bismarckian social insurance programs have long been regarded as the origin of the German welfare state, this book shows how preventive social welfare programs--the second pillar of the welfare state--evolved out of traditional poor relief, and it emphasizes the role of Progressive reformers and local, voluntary initiative in this process and the impact of competing reform discourses on both the social domain and the public sphere.
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Dorit H. Kaufman, Director of the Professional Education Program and Professor of Linguistics has co-edited the following book with
Barbara Brownworth:
Professional Development of International Teaching Assistants
(Alexandria, VA: TESOL, 2006)
The case studies present a kaleidoscope of preparation models for
International Teaching Assistants (ITAs) and underscore the social,
political, linguistic, administrative, and academic challenges in
establishing programs and designing the curriculum to prepare ITAs for
their professional role.
For more information, please visit the TESOL website at:
http://www.tesol.org/s_tesol/sec_document.asp?CID=856&DID=5903&rcss=print
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Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice, Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, co-translated and co-wrote the preface (with Carol Lettieri) for the following book of selected poetry by Plinio Perilli.
Promises of Love(Gradiva Pubications 2004)
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Robert Hoberman of the Linguistics Department is the author of the
book:
- The syntax and semantics of verb morphology in Modern Aramaic:
A Jewish dialect of Iraqi Kurdistan. American Oriental Series,
69. New Haven: American Oriental Society, 1989.
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Patricia A. Dunn, Associate Professor of English Education, has
authored
the following book (with foreword by Stephen M. North):
Talking Sketching Moving: Multiple Literacies in the Teaching of Writing
Professor Dunn presents a writing pedagogy that draws upon multiple
literacies and then offers numerous, detailed examples of how that theory
can be translated into classroom practice. Challenging the assumption that
written texts play an almost exclusive role in the production of knowledge
in composition classrooms, her book foregrounds other, more intellectually
diverse ways of knowing: oral, visual, kinesthetic, spatial, and social
pathways.
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Irene Marchegiani, Director of Field Experience and Clinical Practice, Foreign Language Teacher Education Program, edited with Thomas Haeussler, and wrote the preface for the following book:
The Poetics of Place: Florence Imagined(Florence: Olschki 2000) |
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