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Best Practices for Teaching Reading
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Best Practices for Teaching Reading
What Award-Winning Classroom Teachers Do

Edited by:


November 2008 | 176 pages | Corwin
Enrich your reading instruction with 40 classroom-tested best practices from award-winning teachers! This teaching resource is packed with lessons that work and ideas that can expand the teaching repertoire of new and veteran teachers alike. Readers will find strategies for building students skills in phonetics, phonemics, vocabulary, spelling, and comprehension. Applicable for all phases of reading instruction, this book includes techniques for teaching students with diverse learning styles and competencies and presents ways to:

"Implement guided reading, read alouds, and reading groups

"Use reflective questions as an assessment tool

"Prepare learners for reading testsPromote family and community literacy

 
Preface
 
Acknowledgments
 
About the Author
 
About the Contributors
 
Part I. Reading in the K-6 Classrooms
 
Section A. Motivating Students to Read
Sharon S. Lancaster, Kentucky
1. Reading From the First Day of School
Susan Carter, Missouri
2. Ten Steps to Great Readers
Pamela Jo Roller, Indiana
3. All for the Love of Reading: A Book Is a Gift
Michele Rzewski Copeland, Virginia
4. Establishing a Summer Reading Program
 
Section B. Developing Reading Skills
Susanne Burkhardt, Kentucky
5. Teaching Reading Strategies Through the Analysis of Visual Art
Jennifer Ruth, Texas
6. Using Word Work to Improve Decoding
Jenna Hallman, South Carolina
7. Reading Aloud: Comprehending, Not Word Calling
Linda Hennen, West Virginia
8. Comprehension: Making Connections to Text
 
Section C. Reading Literature Across the Curriculum
Summer Williams, Alabama
9. Incorporating Drama and Writing: Performing a Mystery Play
Donna Bradley, Alabama
10. Social Studies: Reading About Life in the 1800s
Donna Bradley, Alabama
11. Social Studies: Reading the Vietnam Memorial Wall
Jacquylynn Brickman, Minnesota
12. To Read or Not to Read: Shakespeare With Fourth Graders
Diane Woodford, Nebraska
13. Reaching Fifth Graders With Novel Study
 
Section D. Differentiating Instruction
Sharon Lancaster, Kentucky
14. Reading Kinesthetically
Jessica Heidelberg, Indiana
15. Reading and Writing: A Reciprocal Process
Amy Edinger, New Jersey
16. Reading Beyond the Lines: Students With Autistic Disorders
Caridad Alonso, Delaware
17. Encouraging Biliteracy
 
Part II. Reading in Grades 7-12
 
Section A. Motivating Students to Read
Karen Morgan Delbridge, PhD, Wyoming
18. Reflective Practice in the Teaching of Adolescent Reading
Maria I. Davis, Ohio
19. I Hate Reading!
Jill Saceman Ryerson
20. The "I Hate Reading" Club
Heather-Lee M. Baron, Pennsylvania
21. You Simply Need to Love It!
 
Section B. Developing Reading Skills
Jessica Galla, Rhode Island
22. Digging Deeper for Comprehension
Jill Dougherty, Pennsylvania
23. Using Wonder Journals to Teach Research Reading and Writing Skills
Heather-Lee M. Baron, Pennsylvania
24. Make It Your Own! A Vocabulary Activity
 
Section C. Reading Across the Curriculum
Greg Anderson, Colorado
25. Teaching Reading in the Math Classroom
Anita Dobbs, Alabama
26. Reading the Language of Mathematics
Janet K. Vaine, Florida
27. "Who in the World Are You?" An Interdisciplinary Project
Stuart Albright, North Carolina
28. Using Self-Publishing as a Gateway for Critical Reading
 
Section D. Differentiating Instruction
Mikki Nuckols, Idaho
29. Score a BINGO in Reading
Darrell Yater, Ohio
30. Short-Cycle Assessment in a Reading Workshop: A Collaboration Between Teacher and Student
 
Index

"This book allows teachers to read about how other teachers support literacy learning in a variety of contexts."

Mary Alice Barksdale, Associate Professor
Virginia Tech

"There is superb material in this text, and teachers at various grade levels will find many good practices."

Sara E. Spruce, Professor of Education
Olivet Nazarene University

"Teachers can collaborate through the pages of this book."

Jill E. Cole, Associate Professor of Education
Wesley College

"Readers can leave feeling like they can go forward and do something with what they have read."

Emma Barnes, Literacy Facilitator
Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools, NC

"Very logical and easy to follow. Teachers can easily see how they can incorporate these ideas in their teaching."

Susan Bailey, Middle School Reading Specialist
Mequon-Thiensville School District, WI

Sample Materials & Chapters

Chapter 1


For instructors

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ISBN: 9781412924597
£23.99