Dearest Colleagues,
We bring you warm greetings from British Columbia and from
Illinois, where the dreaded winter is past and the summer we have long
waited for waits to greet us! As incoming InterCom co-editors, Natalia and I are excited about this wonderful
opportunity to serve you in the upcoming year. We have been blessed to
have Dr. Kris Acheson-Clair as our predecessor and we can only hope that
we manage to fill her shoes!
In preparing for our first issue, we brainstormed long and
hard, remembering the excellent ideas you shared at the TESOL 2015
convention. You will see that we made a special effort to reflect your
thoughts and to focus in this issue, on intersections between
intercultural communication and the arts. At a time when thinking about
human sensitivity holds much promise for helping us to engage with
concerns arising from difference, we agree that the arts have a
significant potential for helping us communicate across national and
international boundaries.
The articles in this issue, while they speak to our minds,
whisper even more powerfully to our hearts! In an interview, Lakota
artist Keith Braveheart shares thoughts about his work. As he speaks
about his artwork, its connections to cultures and capacity to change
the world, we are invited to see art as a catalyst for social change.
Similarly, in another article, Karissa Weeden and Rachel Ewing
demonstrate how theater arts helped them draw on the creativity and
collaborative support structures of their English language learners to
help them become more comfortable speakers of English. Across these
articles, we realize the transformation that can result from integrating
arts into our life’s work.
In closing, we want to thank those of you who contributed to
this issue and to invite others to respond to our upcoming call for our
second issue titled “ICC: A Critical Perspective”! We know you will
enjoy this issue and we look forward to you being a part of the next!
Thank you for all your support.
Yours in service,
Patriann Smith
Patriann Smith (PhD in literacy
studies, University of South Florida, 2013) serves as a faculty member
in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She teaches courses in reading and
literacy and conducts research on language and literacy teaching,
considering specifically the intercultural experiences of international
multilingual educators. Patriann is an International Reading Association
Hall of Fame Young Scholar (2013–2016) and a Literacy Research
Association Scholar of Color Transitioning Into Academic Research
Institutions (2015–2017). Patriann is excited about
her most recent project, the Handbook of
Research on Cross-Cultural Approaches to Language and Literacy
Development, soon to appear in press
(2015). |