Greetings Social Responsibility Interest Section (SRIS)!
We are Ethan Trinh and Luis Javier Pentón Herrera, the editors
of the SRIS newsletter, TESOLers for Social Responsibility. We are
excited to announce that the theme for our January 2020 issue is Diversifying the TESOL Curriculum. For this issue, we are looking for articles, personal
reflections, and research reports that instructors and the students’
multicultural perspectives bring into the TESOL classrooms. In addition,
we are also open to artistic submissions such as paintings, poems,
stories, pictures, among others, that celebrate, empower, and explore
the topic of TESOL curriculum diversification.
In choosing this theme, we were inspired by beautiful stories
from bilingual/ multilingual and TESOL teachers around the world who are
silently working in their learning environments to deliver just,
equitable, and empowering instruction while embracing their students’
diversity. Additional (non-exhaustive topics) include:
- Home language and language negotiations
- Personal reflections of assimilation and acculturation and
the use of that experience in designing a curriculum
- Activities that promote diversity in TESOL classrooms
- Poems, visual representations, and other forms of artistic expressions
We would love to share a wide range of voices and perspectives
on this topic and particularly encourage submissions from ESOL/ESL/EFL
communities, students, writers, and scholars from around the
world.
We are looking for:
- Feature articles: Share your presentations, research projects, or classroom practices.
- Lesson descriptions: Describe a lesson
plan you’ve created about a social justice topic so that other teachers
can use it with their students as well!
- Anecdotes and stories: Do you have a story
or personal reflection on incorporating social issues into your
classes? If so, we’d love to hear it!
- Visual Representations/Visual Arts: Share
any drawings, pictures, paintings, etc. that fit into the special issue
and that align with social justice.
- Lists of useful resources: Share resources
that you use in your work, along with an explanation of how you use
them or why you find them helpful.
- Reviews: Write about a book or an article
that has inspired you as a teacher or researcher.
- Written Interviews: Is there a member of
the TESOL community you would like to interview? Send the interview our
way!
- Calls to action: Overviews of pressing
issues around the world, and suggestions on how TESOLers can get
involved in the conversation.
- Responses to articles published in the
newsletter: We welcome submissions in dialogue with articles
we have already published. Continue the conversations started in this
issue!
Your submission can be between 500 to 1,500 words. Please keep
this word count in mind as you draft your piece. It includes the title,
byline, teaser and references, so the actual body of the article should
be less than the limit of 1,500 words. If you have an idea but need some
guidance on how to develop it more fully, please email us at srisnewslettertesol@gmail.com,
and we will brainstorm together!
Please send your articles to Luis and Ethan at srisnewslettertesol@gmail.com
with the subject line "SRIS Newsletter Submission.”
The deadline for submissions is 15th December, 2019. We aim to publish this issue by the end of January
2020.
General Submission Quick Guide
Articles should
- have the title in ALL CAPS;
- list a byline (author’s name with hyperlinked email, affiliation, city, country);
- include a 2- to 3-sentence teaser, written in the third person;
- be no longer than 1,500 words (including
bylines, teasers, main text, tables, references and author
bios);
- include a 2- to 3-sentence author biography, written in the third person;
- contain no more than 5 references;
- follow the style guidelines in the Publication Manual of the
American Psychological Association, 6th Edition (APA style);
and
- include an author photo (120 pixels wide by 160 pixels tall)
and any other photos (up to 400 pixels wide, no limit on height) as separate files (do not embed them into your word
document).
The SRIS newsletter is a great venue to share your innovative work and
ideas with our community. We look forward to receiving your submissions
soon!
Kind Regards,
Luis and Ethan |