
Natalia Balyasnikova
|

Patriann
Smith
|
Dear ICIS members,
The fall issue of InterComm is dedicated to
advocacy in TESOL. We understand this theme broadly: as advocacy for our
learners, advocacy for professionalism in English language teaching
(ELT), advocacy for the diversity in ELT across the globe. Indeed, what
better venue to talk about advocacy for diversity and inclusion in TESOL
than the newsletter of the Intercultural Communication Interest
Section, a global community of like-minded individuals unified by values
of respect, understanding, and desire to learn from each other.
We are extremely grateful to the colleagues who took time to
contribute to the fall issue. First, we have a feature article submitted
by Sharon Tjaden-Glass. In her article, Sharon reflects on the process
and outcomes of a dialogue-based intercultural communication program,
delivered over a 6-year period. Such longitudinal studies are rare; they
provide an in-depth and nuanced exploration, making such studies
extremely valuable for researchers and practitioners alike.
Second, we have a book review by Monica Lahiri Hoherchak. As
language educators, we often hear that learning a new language is
inseparable from issues of identity and is affected by power structures
of a dominant culture. In the book Monica reviews, Dreaming in
Hindi: Coming Awake in Another Language, we get firsthand
experience of an American learning Hindi in India—a distinctive
perspective, indeed.
Our editorial team has worked hard over the summer, elaborating
on the future direction of our publication. As we go forward in 2018,
we continue publishing thematic newsletters. Our next newsletter will
focus on intercultural communication online, the digital wonders of
language teaching and learning, and the opportunities the new era of
technology presents to us as educators.
This issue will be the last issue that we, Natalia and
Patriann, edit together as a team. After many years working on this
newsletter, Patriann is stepping down as the coeditor. Patriann has been
instrumental to seeing the transition of the newsletter across
platforms and shaping the format it has today. It's been a great
pleasure working together as a team, and the whole ICIS leadership
wishes Patriann all the best in her future endeavors! We would like to
welcome Maxi-Ann Campbell, ESL/academic writing instructor at Duke
Kunshan University, as incoming coeditor of the newsletter. You might
know Maxi-Ann as the past chair of our interest section and the coauthor
of More
Than a Native Speaker: An Introduction to Teaching English
Abroad, published by TESOL Press.
If you have any ideas for the newsletter—themes, topics or
types of articles you would like to see in the upcoming issues—we are
eager to hear from you. Please email us at newsletter.icis.tesol@gmail.com.
Cheers!
Natalia and Patriann
ICIS Coeditors 2017–2018
Follow us on Twitter:
Natalia @_balyasnikova |
Patriann @Patriann_Smith
Natalia Balyasnikova is a doctoral candidate in
language and literacy education at the University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, Canada. Natalia writes about her life as a graduate student
and a newcomer to Canada in her blog.
Patriann Smith (PhD) is an assistant professor of
language, diversity and literacy studies at Texas Tech University who
relies on tenets of intercultural communication in her cross-cultural
work to better understand how immigrant teachers to the United States
address their ideologies about nonstandardized languages and how these
ideologies affect literacy instruction. The intersections of Patriann’s
research can be better understood by taking a look at her recently
released coedited Handbook of Research on Cross-Cultural
Approaches to Language and Literacy
Development. |