I Read It, but I Don't Get It: Comprehension Strategies for Adolescent Readers by Cris Tovani
$17.55
|
Building Academic Literacy: Lessons from Reading Apprenticeship Classrooms, Grades 6-12 (Jossey Bass Education Series) by Audrey Fielding
$23.00
|
When Kids Can't Read: What Teachers Can Do: A Guide for Teachers 6-12 by Kylene Beers
$26.55
|
Strategies That Work: Teaching Comprehension for Understanding and Engagement by Stephanie Harvey
$27.00
|
Deeper Reading: Comprehending Challenging Texts, 4-12 by Kelly Gallagher
$15.57
|
"Important and highly recommended." (Library Bookwatch, February 2003)
Review
"A breath of fresh air! After reminding us that any teacher who puts a book in front of a student is a reading teacher, the authors give us a teacher-tested reading course for middle and high school students. They avoid the baloney in the present reading debates by paying attention to actual students. What they propose is an apprenticeship in using a tool kit for problem solving in reading. The tool kit itself is a combination of cognitive and social dimensions embedded in subjects. And, lo and behold, they can point to actual results." —Miles Myers, former executive director, National Council of Teachers of English
"As a teacher of inner-city youth, I had tried every idea in my bag of tricks to get my kids to read. It wasn't until I started working with the reading apprenticeship approach that I was able to see changes in my students—in their scores, their attitudes, and their comprehension. The reading apprenticeship approach has completely changed the way I look at my students. Now I share my reading process and invite them to share their problem solving in the classroom. In the beginning of the year I hear, 'I hate this.' Over time I hear, 'I don't get this part, but I think I get this,' and finally, 'This is what I think this means.' More and more I hear, 'What are we reading next?'" —Rita Jensen, teacher, John Muir Middle School, San Leandro, California
"Reading for Understanding should be in the hands of teachers, principals, superintAndents, curriculum coordinators, school board members, state educational leaders, university professors, and teachers in training. Engaging, to the point, and grounded in research, this book shares current work in progress, possible stumbling blocks, ideas to overcome them, and specific strategies with detailed examples. Most middle and high school teachers have little or no 'teaching reading' training. It is not too late and this book is a great start." —Judy Cunningham, principal, South Lake Middle School, Irvine, California
"These authors do not take sides between authenticity of text and task at one end of an instructional continuum and ambitious, explicit instruction at the other end. Instead they transform the apparent contradiction into a sort of resonant complementarity, showing that these two seemingly opposite notions actually support one another quite remarkably. In a policy world in which forced choices have become all too common, it is refreshing to see contradictions transformed into synergies." —P. David Pearson, John A. Hannah Professor of Education, Michigan State University
See all Editorial Reviews
Product Details
|