A highly regarded teacher resource and widely adopted text, this book is grounded in current knowledge about literacy teaching and learning in grades PreK–8. The field's leading authorities present accessible recommendations for best practices that can be tailored to fit specific classroom circumstances and student populations. Provided are strategies for helping all students succeed—including struggling readers and English language learners—and for teaching each of the major components of literacy. The book also addresses ways to organize instruction and innovative uses of technology. Chapters include concrete examples, Engagement Activities, and resources for further learning. New to This Edition *Incorporates the latest research findings and instructional practices.*Chapters on motivation, content-area teaching, new literacies, and family literacy.*Addresses timely topics such as response to intervention, the new common core standards, English language learning, and policy issues.
informative, boring. i found nuggets of helpful information buried in the endless, dragging prose, which made it worth it. plenty to chew on, and even more to forget lol
There are some very good chapters in here, mostly the ones dealing with adolescent education. Where it falls down for me is that it lacks a critical edge and discounts writing for much of the time. The chapter on writing uses as an example a teacher who has to push writing into the curriculum but it doesn't question the reason for this: the rise of high stakes testing and the Common Core State Standards. In my mind best practices involves critical thinking skills and questioning the big issues of the day. I have a feeling that'll be in there somewhere but when the editors choose to start out the book with a chapter in which RTTT and CCSS are introduced in a 'neutral' way they are taking the side of the corporate reformers behind both of these measures. There is no neutral in education. You either support and maintain the status quo or you question the power structures that keep so many children and families down.
Read this for grad school. It contains a lot of quality, research-based instructional strategies, but it felt like a bit of a hodge podge due to having different people write each chapter. I felt like this factor was especially unhelpful when there was one chapter on comprehension of narrative text and another from different researchers on comprehension of informational text. Rather than one author being able to compare and synthesize the strategies of comprehension in two different contexts, the two chapters felt very isolated from each other and were often repetitive. Also, the various authors sometimes took differing stances on the CCSS and its impact/implications for teachers. All of this led to a slightly jarring reading experience. This book would definitely be better for referencing specific chapters in isolation.
While I understand that social justice is an important part of education, and as a teacher, I too try to fight for educational equity, this book took it a little far. OFTEN I felt like I wasn’t reading a book about literacy instruction but rather a book about Ed equity. There’s a whole chapter about how horrible Trump is. Whether or not you like the man is beside the point; it didn’t need to be included in a book about literacy instruction best practices. There were some gold nuggets and some good research. I did learn some best practices to apply to my classroom, but there was also extraneous social justice included.
Each chapter is by (a) different researcher(s), and they’re kind of hit or miss. A solid overview of literacy practices for new educators, K-12. Good reminders of important practices for teaching students reading strategies within any subject area.
This was one of my texts for my masters reading course. Each chapter talks about best practices in a different aspect of literacy. The authors are very much anti-high stakes testing. Instead, the advocate student-centered approaches like writing workshop. This update has some information about Common Core in it.