Directed to preservice and inservice teachers, a new edition of the student text uses a student-centered approach to teach content area literacy and focuses on the needs of students from diverse language and cultural backgrounds.
Donna E. Alvermann teaches courses in popular culture and adolescent literacy at the University of Georgia, where she holds the title of Distinguished Research Professor in Language and Literacy Education. Donna has been a middle/junior high school teacher in Houston, Texas, and Elmira, New York. She has been a fan of “all things pop culture” since the mid-1950s, when she was president of the James Dean Fan Club. Currently, she counts Facebook, YouTube, and Second Life among her favorite pop culture texts.
Even though there was some good information in the book, deciphering it from the very confusing wording was not worth it. The book was terribly written and for it being a book on reading and literacy you would think they would have written it in an easier-to-read manner! Poorly written and very complicated. Not worth it.
The person who wrote this extremely long, convoluted textbook, with its overly complicated explanations that drone on well past my bedtime, obviously had no regard for the mind of a wandering attention span. And if I were a tree that went into the making of it, I'd be pissed.