SRIS Newsletter - August 2020 (Plain Text Version)
|
||||
In this issue: |
LETTER FROM THE EDITORS Trisha Dowling and John Turnbull
We present seven submissions that play with such questions and that help us consider how story, originating among learners, scholars, and transmitters of the English language and from the arts, health sciences, ethnography, peace work, and critical praxis, shapes both individual identity and movements toward justice and more equitable relationships in community. The first four submissions take us from an immigrant detention center in Texas (Helen Boursier, “Facilitating Art/Reflection for ESOL/ESL with Large Groups”) to Colombia, where Yecid Ortega conducts anthropological fieldwork and asks, in an artful blending of student stories, what it means “to be human in a posthumanist era” (“From Hell to Heaven? We Are Humanity, Not a Country”). Authors Bedrettin Yazan (“Critical Autoethnography in TESOL”) and Abir Ward (“Social Justice Pedagogy”) ask how self-reflective storytelling affect the researcher’s and instructor’s task and identities. In separate sections, Boursier offers a timely report on stories emerging from one English-teaching field site in Matamoros, Mexico, among those suffering from restrictive U.S. policy against asylum seekers in the borderlands (“Team Brownsville’s Escuelita de la Banqueta”). Instructors looking for extensive reading to help bring stories of social justice into the classroom will benefit from Tung Vu and Canh Truong’s extensive list of resources (“Integrating Civic Engagement through Extensive Reading in an EFL Context”). Finally, in a call to action, Emily Feuerherm brings attention to narratives of disparity in health care amid the COVID-19 pandemic. As new newsletter editors, we welcome your comments on these contributions and these issues (email srisnewslettertesol@gmail.com) as we act to track such dynamic conversations and serve the Social Responsibility Interest Section and broader membership of the TESOL International Association. References Price, P. L. (2004). Dry place: Landscapes of belonging and exclusion. University of Minnesota Press. |