miércoles, 2 de julio de 2014

Analysis of a Reference List according to the American Psychological Association Manual


The reference list is an important part of an academic paper; it will present the resources that the authors used to complete their research for their work. The reference list provides the reader with the necessary information to locate and retrieve any source cited in the paper. All the sources that are cited must appear in the reference list. (Purdue Owl, 2014).  According to the American Psychological Association (APA) the references should be in a new page separated from the rest of the text. This page should have the title References centered at the top of the page, not in bold neither underlined. All the text presented at this page has to be double spaced as the rest of the text in the paper (2010). The APA manual present rules for the academic papers, however not all them follow the APA style and because of this, they might not be taken as part of the academic world.  The purpose of this work is to analyse a reference list under the APA style conventions.
The reference list of the academical paper to be analysed does not contain the title “Reference” as the APA (2010) establishes, it instead has the title of “Works cited”. Although the title is not correct, it is well centered and it is not in bold neither underlined as the manual suggests. Leaving aside the title, the three sources belong to papers of liberal arts and humanities which follow the Modern Language Association style (MLA).
The differences among the MLA and the APA style are noticeable. The first source cited in the reference list does not contain the authors in the first part, it has on the contrary the title of the work and it is between inverted commas. The date when the source was retrieved is not clear, moreover, it does not contain the word retrieved neither the link of the web page. The second and the third source contain similar discrepancies with the APA (2010) style; they contain the authors but appear the full names and surnames. The APA (2010) manual suggests that in the reference list should show the surname of the authors and the name should be abbreviated. As the first source, the second and the third have similar problems. They do not have the link of the source. At the same time, the reference list should have the dates of publications in brackets.
In conclusion, not all the papers follow the APA style, it will depend on the format and the style the authors use. The reference list analysed under the APA style presented many discrepancies as the sources were cited under the MLA style. The reference list cannot be easily read to follow the links; on the contrary if it followed the APA style it would facilitate the task of trying to follow the sources.


















References
American Psychological Association. (2010). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association(6th ed.). Washington, DC. 
 Purdue OWL (2014). APA style workshop. Retrieved May 2014 from https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/664/1/         




Contrastive Analysis of Results and Discussion Sections in Medicine and Education Research Articles


In the last twenty years, the study of different text types in the light of genre-based analysis has become a central issue for linguists and English language teachers.  This has been partly due to the dominant role of English as the language of international research literature and to the ¨North-South imbalance in the world¨ (Swales, 1987, p.43) by which nonnative speaker academicians from underdeveloped countries have not been able to actively participate in their discourse communities at an international level.  Given these circumstances, many recent studies have focused on the analysis of the structure and linguistic features of the Research Article (RA).
  Even though most journals from diverse scientific fields have adopted the Introduction, Methods,Results and Discussion ( IMRAD) format for structuring their RAs, it is noteworthy that ¨scholarly discourse is not uniform and monolithic…. It is an outcome of a multitude of practices and strategies, where what counts as convincing argument and appropriate tone is carefully managed for a particular audience.¨ (Hyland, 2004, p.3).  Consequently, numerous attempts have been made to analyse and compare the sections of RAs within specific fields with the aim of helping nonnative speaker scholars better understand the specificities of academic discourse.  However, rather less attention has been paid to the potential of comparatively analyzing sections of RAs from different fields as a tool for studying written discourse for academic publishing ends.   Great gap!
The aim of this paper is to explore the possible variations in the Results, Discussion and Conclusion sections between two RAs in the fields of medicine and education:  Bhatt et al. (2014) and Crossley and McNamara (2013).  This paper seeks to enrich the understanding of similarities and differences in these sections pursuant to disciplinary variations.  Specifically, we analyze the sections based on the genre analysis models proposed by Swales ( 1990) and Swales and Feak (2004).  The plan of this paper is as follows: first, there is an analysis of the Results Sections of the two RAs; next, a comparison of the Discussion and Conclusion Sections is provided; and finally, some conclusions are offered. 

            As far as the analysis of the Results Section (RS) is concerned, Swales (1998) states that the first paragraphs are used to introduce the general results of the researcher's findings, tables and figures. Regarding the medicine RA, the title of this section appears in bold with capital letters on the left margin. Not only did the authors  separate the RS from the rest of their work, but also they subdivided it in two subtitles: ¨Door-to-Needle Times¨ and ¨Clinical Outcome¨, where they expose their main findings and mainly use past simple and active voice to describe the procedure of their study.
Although it can be assumed that Bhatt et al. (2014) adhered to the style conventions set by the American Medical Association Manual (2007) in order to get their RA published, it should be pointed out that the manner in which results are displayed seems to mirror the majority of the rules established by the American Psychological Association (APA) (2007).  However, if seen from the perspective of the latter conventions, there are some inconsistencies: the titles are not italicized and  each table does not begin on a separate page. The authors use two types of figures: a bar and a line graph. They include the words ¨Figure¨ and the corresponding number but they are neither in italics nor double spaced, as required by APA (2007). 
In the education RA, the RS is separated from the rest of the article and the title appears in bold with capital letters on the left margin. Another difference that can be noticed when comparing the two RAs is that the education one does include tables but not figures.  The most striking difference with the medical RA, however, is that the tables are not only present in the RS, but also in other parts of the paper. Thus, it can be assumed that this RA does not comply with the APA (2007) rules as these conventions establish that the tables and figures should be written in the RS and that each table and figure must be separated on different pages. In this case, the section is divided in several subsections and they all contain tables exposing the results.
            Even though genre analysts do not distinguish between the Discussion Section (DS) and the Conclusion Section (CS) , it should be noted that the two RAs do establish these separate sections.  Such distinction ¨ is partly conventional, depending on traditions in particular fields and journals¨ (Swales & Feak, 2004, p.268).  According to these authors, there are three discussion moves:  move 1, by which RA writers consolidate their research space; move 2, in which the limitations of the study may be indicated; and move 3, in which areas of further research or courses of action are recommended. 
Regarding Bhatt et al.’s (2014) RA, it is noteworthy that while moves 1 and 2 are developed extensively (there are six paragraphs devoted to summarizing results and stating conclusions on the clinical benefits of rapid administration of intravenous tissue plasminogen activator and one paragraph under the section ¨Limitations¨), move 3 is absent.  Crossley and McNamara (2013), in turn, fully develop their findings and claims in fourteen paragraphs (move 1) and explain the need for further studies in the last paragraph of the conclusion section (move 3).  However, references to the limitations of their study (move 2) are scarce in the latter RA. 
Because ¨the structure of the discussion section is closely correlated to both the number and kind of research questions posed in the introduction sections of the paper¨ (Belanger, 1982, as cited by Swales, 1990, p. 171), DSs tend to present cycles through which each research question is passed.   Swales (1990) identifies the following eight-move scheme: background information, statement of results, (un)expected outcome, reference to previous research, explanation, exemplification, deduction and hypothesis, and recommendation. 
In relation to this, Crossley and McNamara (2013) begin the DS by generalizing their results and highlighting their implications in the first paragraph and then dedicate all the other paragraphs to discuss their findings from the angle of the different, specific variables considered during their study (each of them introduced by their respective subheading).  Although some of these subsections are succinct, others are more developed and, thus, evidence some of Swales’ (1990) cycle moves.  For instance, under the subheading ¨Speaking Proficiency¨,  there are two paragraphs: In the first paragraph, some theoretical information is provided in order to define speaking proficiency (move 1: background information).   The second paragraph begins with a statement of results (move 2) when it is stated that ¨Our analysis focuses solely on language organization and demonstrates that …¨ (Crossley and McNamara, 2013, p. 187).  Having said that, the authors go on by making reference to previous research with the aim of providing support to their claim (move 4) : ¨An important component of our study is that the tested features adhere to the relations hypothesized … (i.e., speaking proficiency or communicative competence; Shin, 2005)¨ (p. 187).  Immediately after this, Crossley and McNamara (2013) close the paragraph by making a claim about the generalizability of some of the reported results (move 7: deduction and hypothesis) when they state that: ¨Given this, we have confidence that our models have not only predictive validity, but also face validity.¨ (p. 187).
Bhatt et al.’s (2014) RA, on the contrary,  does not display as many cycles as the article on education.  The reason for this may be that Bhatt et al. (2014) posed a single research question in the introduction related to the administration of a drug within a specific time frame after hospital arrival.  Consequently,  the DS is more linear and refers to the authors’ results (move 2), though references to previous initiatives and guideline recommendations are quoted in this section (move 4). 
The analysis carried out in this paper has revealed that even though there are some similarities in the generic structure of the RSs, DSs and CSs of the two RAs, many differences surfaced when examining them in detail.  As it was explained early in this paper, some differences found might have been related to the different style conventions followed by the journals in which these RAs were published.  Another significant finding was that the DS and CS moves of the two RAs did not completely correspond to the genre analysis models proposed by Swales and Feak (2004).  However, the fact that so many traces of such models could be identified in two RAs which belong to very different disciplinary communities confirmed the claim that Swales' (1990) and Swales and Feak’s (2004) models of analysis contribute to a better understanding of how information and knowledge are structured in RAs.
  Because this paper has compared only two RAs from different fields, the results of this analysis cannot be generalized to all the RAs in the medicine and education disciplines.  In spite of this, it should be possible to gain greater awareness on how different disciplines write by contrasting a larger corpus of RAs from the medicine and education fields in terms of Swales’(1990) and Swales and Feak's (2004) genre analysis models.



References 
American Psychological Association. (2007). Concise rules of APA style. Washington,DC: British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data.
Bhatt, D.L., Fonarow, G., Hernandez, A.F., Peterson, E., Reeves, M.J., Saver J.,  … Zhao, X. (2014). Door-to-needle times for tissue plasminogen activator administration and clinical outcomes in acute ischemic stroke before and after a quality improvement initiative. JAMA, 311(16),1632-1640.doi: 10.1001/JAMA.2014.3203
Crossley, S., & McNamara, D. (2013). Applications of text analysis tools for spoken response grading. Language Learning & Technology, 17(2),171-192. Retrieved from http://llt.msu.edu/issues/june2013/crossleymcnamara.pdf
Hyland, K. (2004). Disciplinary discourses: Social interactions in academic writing. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
Swales, J.M. (1987). Utilizing the literatures in teaching the research paper. TESOL Quarterly, 21(1), 41-68. doi: 10.2307/3586354
Swales, J.M. (1990). Genre analysis: English in academic and research settings. (Cambridge Applied Linguistics Series). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Swales, J.M. (1998). Other oors, other voices: A textography of a small university building. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum

Swales, J. M. & Feak, C. B. (2004) Academic writing for graduate students: Essential tasks and skills (2nd ed.) Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press

Analysis of two Research Articles

In order to establish new facts and reach to conclusions about academical topics, researchers use Research Articles (RA) as a tool to communicate their findings. These types of papers are composed by several parts, one of them is the introduction which is needed to call readers’ attention. Introductions in R.A follow the structure of the Create a Research Space model (C.A.R.S) that follow a number of semantic and syntactic features (Swales and Feak, 1994).
The comparison of two RAs from different fields has demonstrated that not all papers follow the structures established in order to be considered as academical works. The introductions should go from the general topic of discussion to the particular one; there are three different moves: in the first one the researcher does a literature review. In the second move the researcher establishes a niche and expands previous knowledge. The third move outlines the purposes of the research ( Swales & Feak, 1994). Another important section in R.A is the method, due to the fact that it describes the work of the researcher, specifying which tool was used for the investigation. The purpose of this paper is to compare and analyse the introduction and method used in a medical R.A and in an educational one to reveal if they follow the academic conventions.
Jeon- Ellis, Debski and Wigglesworth (2005) introduce their paper with the title “introduction” and it is separated in four paragraphs. The first two paragraphs contain the topic and the authors explain the purpose of CALL. In the first sentence of the third paragraph the first move is clearly seen, where in this cycle they state that a number of studies have explored the types of oral communication during the utilization of computers. In the first two paragraphs the authors make use of present tenses to describe current knowledge, at the end of the first paragraph they refer to the specific implementation of ProCALL in past. The same occurs in the third paragraph where the authors refer to previous investigations. The second move is present when the niche is established with a negative opening, in this article Ellis et al. employs: “However, anecdotal evidence also suggests that project-orientation and high levels of motivation to accomplish goals not directly related to language learning may discourage Students from using the target language in the classroom, as does the use of technology in the case of students with poor computer skills” (p.122). The third move is present in the fourth paragraph, the researchers present the aims of the paper with the phrase “the present study investigates […]” (Ellis et al., 2005, p. 122).
The medical RA, on the other hand presents a different organization compared with the educational one. The introduction is written in the present tense in only one paragraph, and it does not have the title introduction as in the first analyzed article. Bowen et al.’s article (2013) refers to a general idea of the problem of obesity, diabetes and dementia, as first move. The second move is not explicit with a negative opening but the authors use the phrase “it is important to understand the potential sequences […]” (Bowen et al., 2013, p. 541), in order to generate a niche. The third move does not contain a semantic feature to indicate the purpose of the paper as in Ellis et al.’s article; however the authors establish the aim of the paper by explaining what they have evaluated and expose their hypothesis “glucose levels are associated with the risk of dementia” (Bowen et al., 2013, p. 541).
As regards the methods implemented, the educational article does not contain the title of “method” but methodology instead, which is not centered at the start of the section. There are subdivisions but it is not mentioned how “materials” were implemented. The mostly used tense in this article is passive voice. The same drawbacks are present in the medical article, with the difference that the section is called “method”. Not all the subdivisions are present as Swales and Feak (1994) suggest, the subsections of the method are only separated in participants but not in materials, neither procedure. Active voice is used in many occasions “we computed”, “we classified”, “we used”, to describe the procedure of the investigation.
The two articles analysed have been written under the C.A.R.S model which conveys certain rules for the introduction. The educational article contains the introduction requirements, whereas the medical article presents them but not in an explicit form with discourse markers. Nevertheless, both articles do not accomplish the structure of the method section; neither of the papers separate the subsections with the corresponding titles. Moreover, the educational article contains the word methodology instead of method. Even though both articles are not well- structured, they are based on a sound application of theory and analysis, thus they are relevant for the academic community.

                                  





References

Ellis, G., Debski,R.,Wigglesworth G. (2005) Oral interaction around computers in the project-oriented CALL classroom. University of Melbourne, retrieved from  http://llt.msu.edu/vol9num3/pdf/jeon.pdf
 Bowen J.,  Craft S.,Crane P., Haneuse S.,  McCormik W., McCurry S.,  Montine T., Larson E., Li G., Kahn S., Zheng H. (2013) Glucose Levels and Risk of Dementia. The New England Journal of Medicine, retrieved from  http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa1215740
Swales, J.M., & Feak, C.B. (1994). Academic writing for graduate students: Essential tasks

and skills. Ann Harbor, MI: The University of Michigan Press

jueves, 21 de noviembre de 2013

Analysis of an Academic Review According to the American Psychological Association Manual


The American psychological Association (APA, 2010), is one of the manuals which contains pre-established rules for academic writing style as well as citations and reference lists. Members of the discourse community who decide to produce academic papers should follow those rules (Purdue OWL, 2013).  The purpose of this work is to analyse if the Review of Deconstructing DigitalNatives  Mark (2012)follows some  pre- established conventions of the (APA, 2010) style, such as citations, signal phrases and reference list.
 Mark (2012) includes in his review some paraphrased in- text citations identified by a signal phrase, the authors’ surname and between brackets the date of the book, due to the fact that the author is mentioned in the structure of the sentence. In the review there are also direct quotations, which are mainly used in order to present certain phrases or words used in the book which is being reviewed. Those quotes are generally presented by a signal phrase, the authors’ surname and the page number, but in some cases there is no date between brackets which should be written (APA, 2010).
As regards signal phrases, in the review it could be found different ones such as “explains, identifies, a notable example, asserts, suggest, explains, recommends”, among others. According to the APA style (2010) signal phrases are used in order to lead quotations or citations, in that sense, the readers would know when it used a material written by others authors.
Considering APA style (2010) rules the reference list should be at the end of the body of the text in a new page. In addition, the title “references” should be centered, alienated and not in bold, (Purdue Owl, 2013). In the review the reference page is not separated from the body of the text, moreover the title reference is not centered and in bold.  The reference list follows the alphabetical order proposed by APA (2010), although it does not have double space neither hanging indent as it is required (Purdue Owl, 2013).  The signal phrase retrieved in digital documents is used by the author.
It could be concluded that the review written by Mark  (2012) generally follows the APA style (2010). Although there are some inconsistencies as regards APA style (2010) style and conventions. It can be noticed in direct quotations and in the format of the reference list.






References
American Psychological Association. (2010). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association(6th ed.). Washington, DC
Mark, N. (2012). Review of Deconstructing Digital Natives. [Review of the book Deconstructing Digital Natives: Young People, Technology and the New Literacies]. Retrieved  October 2013,  http://llt.msu.edu/issues/october2012/review1.pdf
Purdue OWL (2013). APA style workshop Retrieved October 2013,

            https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/664/01/



                                    Deconstructing Digital Natives. Annotated bibliography.

Mark, N. (2012). Review of Deconstructing Digital Natives. [Review of the book Deconstructing Digital Natives: Young People, Technology and the New Literacies]. Retrieved  October 2013,  http://llt.msu.edu/issues/october2012/review1.pdf

Mark (2012) offers a thorough review of the book Deconstructing Digital Natives. He analyses the weak and strong points of this book. The review takes a critical view where Mark (2012) analyses deeply the necessity of having images and figures in order to understand better some concepts presented. Mark analyses some concepts presented by the authors of the book.  He  uses direct quotations in order to be precise with the concepts. The review clarifies some topics and apart from that it is explained each section of the book, which are three and twelve chapters. The readers who enjoy books related to technology could read this simple review in order to understand a complex book which has many chapters.  Mark summarizes all the chapters and gives a quite useful critique. 





References
Mark, N. (2012). Review of Deconstructing Digital Natives. [Review of the book Deconstructing Digital Natives: Young People, Technology and the New Literacies]. Retrieved  October 2013,  http://llt.msu.edu/issues/october2012/review1.pdf




Critique to a Handbook for International Students



The book Academic Writing, a Handbook for International Students (2006, Bailey), presents simple activities which are recommended to students of different levels in order to practice their academic writing skills. In Bailey’s (2006) words,“It is a flexible course that allows students of all subjects and levels, from foundation to PhD, to practise those aspects of writing which are most important for their studies” (p.vii). The main purpose of Bailey’s (2006) work is probably to provide a guide with exercises in order to help students to learn academic writing. Although the book contains different exercises and papers, they may not be useful for advanced students due to its level.
Bailey (2006) presents a second edition where he separates it in four different sections. In “Part 1: The Writing Process” (pp.3-60) the exercises are meant to deal with sentences and with general rules of writing. In “Part 2: Elements of writing” (pp. 65- 114) students are offered exercises to practice essential parts of writing such as adverbs, nouns, punctuation, and so forth. “Part 3: Accuracy in writing” (pp. 119-182), there are exercises to practice grammar. “Part 4: Writing models” (pp. 185-199) samples of academic works can be found. After all the sections, there is a part with suggested answers for the exercises.
The book is presented in order to learn elements for academic writing. However the section which should deal deeply with it, part one, “avoiding plagiarism” (p.2), does not include sufficient activities neither examples. The author should have included the basic rules, such as in- text citations or reference list, of the Manual of the American Psychological Association (APA) (2010). Additionally, the handbook does not present a variety of  academic sampler texts as it is mentioned in the introduction: “Writing Models offers examples of the types of  writing that students commonly need, including letters and survey reports as well as essays” (Bailey, 2006, p. vii). It would have been better if the author had included more samples of academic writings in order to give students a wide variety of texts; those mentioned seem to be directed to students who start writing academically.
As regards the level of the book, it presents elementary exercises and examples. The book would have been more useful if the author had recommended it to a specified level of language competence. “The range goes from international students to PhD” (Bailey, 2006, p. vii). The author meant to provide a wide range of practice in different levels but instead it can be noticed in the book that the exercises are really useful for a beginner of academic writing instead of an advanced level. The book in this case may not achieve the expectations that the author presented.
So as to conclude, the book may not be appropriate to practice academic writing for all levels. It could be recommended this book for the students who are starting to produce their academic pieces of writings. Students with an advanced level may find the book quite incomplete and it could only serve in order to review elementary items of he academic writing.






References
American Psychological Association. (2010). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (6th ed.). Washington, DC.  

Bailey, S. (2006). Academic Writing: A handbook for international students.  Retrieved November 2013 from   http://npu.edu.ua/!e-book/book/djvu/A/iif_kgpm_t27.pdf 

miércoles, 20 de noviembre de 2013

Characteristics of the discourse community

          Many authors have presented different theories about discourse communities.  Specific characteristics should be taken into account at the moment of deciding if a group belongs to a discourse community or not. Swales (1990) presented a list of six items to analyze if a determined group belongs to a discourse community or not. It is the aim of this work to analyze characteristics of the discourse community taking into account Swales’ theory.
Swales (1990) states that it is necessary to have common goals with the group to be a discourse community, having certain objectives and sharing specific interests. Kutz (1997, cited in Kristine-Kleese, 2004), exemplifies this, “its members have, overtime, developed a common discourse that involves shared knowledge, common purposes, common relationships, similar attitudes and values, shared understandings about how to communicate their knowledge and achieve their shared purposes, and a flow of discourse that has a particular structure and style”(p.9).
Apart from having common goals, according to Swales (1990), it is necessary to have participatory mechanisms. McLaughlin and Talbert (1993, cited in Wenzlaff, Terri L, Wiesman, K.C, 2004)clearly express that to maintain a discourse community, not only there must be a collaborative culture but also there has to be an environment that supports risk- taking, otherwise, the group probably could not be able to rich their goals without the participation of its members.
Swales (1990) makes also reference that it is important to have a community-specific genres. On Kristine- Kleese (2001, p.5) words “community colleges comprise their own discourse community because the two-year college culture does not include an expectation of faculty scholarship as it exists in the research university”. This statement bears out the fact that each group will have a specific genre, despite of being in the same environment.
In a discourse community, according to Swales’ theory (1990), it is supposed to be used highly specialized terminology, through the use of abbreviations and acronyms. For instance, “teachers rely on primary and secondary artifacts to reflect on their own practice reflection,” (Hoffman, Artiles & Torres, 2003, p. 10). Therefore, with this example presented it is seen that teachers make use of a specific terminology within their community.
 Swales (1990) mentions the importance of high level of expertise. Cazden (1993, cited in Hoffman, Artiles & Torres, 2003), explains that the groups’ practices will shape the normative, ways of acting and the belonging in the inquiry community. The novice people that want to participate in the inquiry group, assistance strategies should enlist them, before they become fully competent in the use of such practices).
We might conclude that the members of a certain group should have specific characteristics to be recognized as a discourse community. Swales’(1990) list encompassed, having high level of expertise, high level of terminology, a determined genre and participate inside that group to be named a discourse community. The characteristics have been exemplified in groups of teachers and community colleges, consequently it could be said that if a certain group follows the characteristics presented by Swales, that group might be called a discourse community.




References

Hoffman-Kipp, P., Artiles, A. J., & Lopez Torres, L. (2003). Beyond reflection: teacher learning as praxis. Theory into Practice.Retrieved October 2007, from http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0NQM/is_3_42/ai_108442653
Kelly-Kleese, C. (2001). Editor’s Choice: An Open Memo to Community College Faculty and Administrators. Community College Review. Retrieved October 2007, from http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0HCZ/is_1_29/ai_77481463
Kelly-Kleese, C. (2004). UCLA community college review: community college scholarship and discourse. Community College Review. Retrieved October 2007, from http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0HCZ/is_1_32/ai_n6361541
Swales, J. M (1990). Genre analysis: English in academic and research settings. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Wenzlaff, T. L., & Wieseman, K. C. (2004). Teachers Need Teachers To Grow. Teacher Education Quarterly. Retrieved October 2007, from http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3960/is_200404/ai_n9349405

sábado, 7 de septiembre de 2013



Welcome to my blog!

The aim of this blog is to publish my academic writings.  This is the first time I am going to make public my work, and to tell you the truth I have never been delighted with writing.  Anyhow, to share our compositions is an experience which will enrich us, not only as learners but also to open our minds; as my teacher of Management, Gonzales Marina Roxana, said “think outside the box”.
Now that you know the purpose of this blog, let me explain you the title. First, Teaching and learning are the activities that I am currently doing. Second, I have decided to write this title because we as teachers teach, but at the same time we learn. 
You are all invited to comment!

Kind regards, 


Romina