Teresa P. Pica, also known as Tere Pica, was Professor of Education at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education, a post she held from 1983 until her death in 2011 died she was 66..[1] Her areas of expertise included second language acquisition, language curriculum design, approaches to classroom practice, and classroom discourse analysis. Pica was well known for her pioneering work in task-based language learning and published widely in established international journals in the field of English as a foreign or second language and applied linguistics.
(26 September 1945 – 15 November 2011)
As a dissertation adviser over a period of 25 years, Dr. Pica supervised more than 50 doctoral dissertations at Penn and at universities abroad. Some of her best-known advisees include her first two doctoral students,[4] Jessica Williams (1987)[5] and Catherine Doughty (1988),[6] as well as Richard Young,[7] Valerie Jakar,[8] Joanna Labov,[9] and Shannon Sauro.[10] Tere's last doctoral student to complete was Elizabeth Scheyder (dissertation defended 10/26/11, degree awarded 2012).[11][12]
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(26 September 1945 – 15 November 2011)
Early Years
Before entering the field of TESOL, Dr. Pica was a speech and language pathologist. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in three years, graduating in 1982.[2] In 1983, she took over the position of her advisor, Michael Long, who left Penn in 1982.[3]Teaching
Dr. Pica's passion in life was teaching and advising students. She was known for never taking summers or sabbatical years off[citation needed] and for always teaching multiple sections of two core courses in the TESOL MSEd program: "EDUC 527: Approaches to Teaching English and Other Modern Languages" and "EDUC 670: Second Language Acquisition". By doing this, she taught thousands of TESOL Masters Degree seekers from all over the world over her 30 year tenure at Penn GSE.As a dissertation adviser over a period of 25 years, Dr. Pica supervised more than 50 doctoral dissertations at Penn and at universities abroad. Some of her best-known advisees include her first two doctoral students,[4] Jessica Williams (1987)[5] and Catherine Doughty (1988),[6] as well as Richard Young,[7] Valerie Jakar,[8] Joanna Labov,[9] and Shannon Sauro.[10] Tere's last doctoral student to complete was Elizabeth Scheyder (dissertation defended 10/26/11, degree awarded 2012).[11][12]
To see more of who died in 2011 click here
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