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Teaching Reading In Social Studies, Science and Math (Theory and Practice)
 
 
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Teaching Reading In Social Studies, Science and Math (Theory and Practice) [Paperback]

Laura Robb (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0439176697 978-0439176699 April 23, 2008
Includes strategy lessons to use before, during and after reading. Explains how to support students one-on-one and how to use discussions to deepen learning, build vocabulary and use literature in the content areas.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author


Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Scholastic (April 23, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0439176697
  • ISBN-13: 978-0439176699
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.9 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #96,122 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

About Laura Robb



Author, teacher, coach, and speaker, Laura Robb has completed 43years of teaching in grades 4-8. She presently coaches teachers in reading/writing workshop at Powhatan School in Virginia and coaches teachers in grades K-8 in Staunton, Virginia, Long Island, and Ann Arbor, ichigan, and West Nyack, New York.

She has written more than 16 books for teachers -- her most recent titles are her 476 page binder, Teaching Reading: A Complete Resource for Grades 4 and Up, and a big book for teaching reading strategies, Teaching Reading With Think Aloud Lessons. In addition, Robb has penned these best sellers for Scholastic: Nonfiction Writing From the Inside Out: Lessons for Teaching all Elements of the Craft, Inspired by Conversations with Leading Authors, Teaching Reading in Middle School, Teaching Reading in Social Studies, Science, and Math, Grammar Strategies and Lessons That Strengthen Students' Writing

Look for Robb's newest Scholastic book: Differentiating Reading Instruction shows teachers in grades 4 and up how to meet the divertse needs of classes with mixed reading levels.
Robb has just completed a major work on writing for Heinemann called: Teaching Middle School Writers--available April, 2010. She has completed a second edition of Teaching Reading in Middle Schoolthat will be available in June, 2010.

Robb has designed classroom libraries for Scholastic. Presently, Robb has classroom libraries for grades 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. She also works with Scholastic to customize classroom libraries when school districts request tailoring purchases to their specific needs.

A co-author for The Great Source's Daybooks and Sourcebooks, Grades 2, 3, 4, and 5, Robb also co-authored The Great Source's Summer Success Reading Program for Grades K-8, their Reading Handbook for grades 6-8, one for grades 4-5, and one for grade 3. Presently, Robb is the senior author of Reading Advantage, a Great Source program for middle and high school students who read two to eight years below grade level.
Robb is the lead author for the revision of the Daybooks for grades 3 to 5.

Robb has completed a three year term on the National Council of Teachers of English Commission on Reading. Robb and commission colleagues have written a book on literacy for NCTE called:What Research Really Says About Teaching and Learning to Read, edited by Dr. Steve Kucer. . She's also served on the editorial review board for Language Arts magazine. Robb wrote the "Motivating Readers' Column for Instructor Magazine for 1996-1998. She's also collected two poetry anthologies: Snuffles and Snouts illustrated by Steven Kellogg (Dial, 1995) and Music and Drum illustrated by Deborah Lill (Philomel, 1997).

Robb is a keynote speaker at conferences all over the country, trains teachers on differentiating reading instruction and writes articles for education journals.


 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Teaching Reading Across Subject Areas, October 8, 2010
By 
Dorcas (Orlando, FL) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Teaching Reading In Social Studies, Science and Math (Theory and Practice) (Paperback)
I checked out this book at my local public library, but I kept getting late fees for keeping it too long. It has been invaluable in my degree program. I decided it was time for me to get my own personal copy for future use. This is an excellent reference book for curriculum planning and enhancement. It contains a host of reading activities that can be used for subject areas such as math, social studies, and science. Teachers are always looking for ways to increase students' reading in the content areas--this book certainly accomplishes that task. It also helped me to generate ideas of my own in other subject areas, e.g., geography, thematic units, and lesson plans, etc. It should be called the guide to teaching reading across the curriculum. Do use the reference pages in the back of the book as they offer another great resource for incorporating these content areas into reading. I especially like that it has wonderful ideas for secondary students. It has made my unit planning so much easier, and made learning fun for my students.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Generic, bland, impractical teacher's ed text., October 27, 2009
This review is from: Teaching Reading In Social Studies, Science and Math (Theory and Practice) (Paperback)
This is more or less the downmarket version of Kylene DeBeers substantially better "Why Kids Can't Read". In this text, Robb repeatedly cites herself and employs a "three part learning framework" that's so asinine she can't even seem to keep it straight. Really who would do lesson plans in chunks of beginning/middle/end? It's silly. No really, that's her "revolutionary" idea.

Anyway the book is littered with inconsistencies, the strategies do not even match up to the same part of her learning framework throughout the book (for proof check the list on p.58 and compare with the list on p.231 for one example). The strategies themselves are pretty much the same as every other book like this. Not particularly bad, but Vacca & Vacca have a lot more of them (and had some nice graphic organizers) and DeBeers' text was at least marginally interesting about it.

The worst part is how ridiculously impractical it is. Depth, not breadth is emphasized, which is commendable in principle, but if you taught like this, you'd finish maybe a chapter by the end of June and your kids would be illiterate. It recommends 20-30 minutes for responding to prompts - a 5-7 minutes "Do Now" activity. It's a hysterically out of touch book by another educrat. If you listen to the time guidelines, prepare to be fired.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I needed this book, July 25, 2011
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This review is from: Teaching Reading In Social Studies, Science and Math (Theory and Practice) (Paperback)
In our last staff meeting of the year, we were told that we must teach reading in our subject areas because budget issues had forced the elimination of reading teachers in the high schools here. Many of my students are non-readers, for a variety of reasons; many of my students in past years were in reading classes. Although we had a 30 minute presentation on reading strategies, the information was not inherently usable: it was more of a list of things to try. What I needed was a cohesive and coherent plan to incorporate reading-specific strategies into my physical science classes so I would not lose too much curriculum time. I also believe that any strategies I practiced should become part of the students' toolkits for other classes.

After taking several seminars and reviewing several books, I was still uncertain about how to proceed: I wanted seamless integration of the reading goals with the subject matter.

I ordered this book because of the author's insights on the Scholastic web site. Laura Robb made sense to me.

This book was exactly what I was seeking. I now have a plan that (I think) will work. It fits nicely with the BEPE model of instruction that we introduced a year ago. I can also easily implement Thinking Maps with the reading objectives. And if the plan has to be changed, and it will, this book will continue to be an excellent resource for strategies and transitions. In fact Ms. Robb addresses the need to change a strategy when students have mastered it, or when the strategy simply isn't working.

I recommended this book to our principal as a must-have for every teacher in our building.
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