Principles of Effective Literacy Instruction, Grades K-5

Principles of Effective Literacy Instruction, Grades K-5

Author: Seth A. Parsons

Publisher: Guilford Publications

Published: 2021-05-21

Total Pages: 354

ISBN-13: 1462546048

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What are the principles that every elementary teacher must learn in order to plan and adapt successful literacy instruction? This concise course text and practitioner resource brings together leading experts to explain the guiding ideas that underlie effective instructional practice. Each chapter reviews one or more key principles and highlights ways to apply them flexibly in diverse classrooms and across grade levels and content areas. Chapters cover core instructional topics (phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension); high-quality learning environments; major issues such as assessment, differentiation, explicit instruction, equity, and culturally relevant pedagogy; and the importance of teachers’ reflective practice and lifelong learning.


Catalog

Catalog

Author: Columbia College (Chicago, Ill.)

Publisher:

Published: 1920

Total Pages: 72

ISBN-13:

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Balancing Principles for Teaching Elementary Reading

Balancing Principles for Teaching Elementary Reading

Author: James V. Hoffman

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2014-04-08

Total Pages: 146

ISBN-13: 1135679711

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This book appears at a time when the crisis rhetoric about schools, teaching, and learning to read is extremely high. There is a rising call within the profession for a balanced perspective on reading. Balancing Principles for Teaching Elementary Reading aspires to help set the agenda for improving the quality of literacy instruction in the United States--by recentering the debate from "What's better, 'whole language' or 'phonics'?" to "What can we do in reading instruction to prepare all children for the literacy demands of the next century?" The authors, all members of the professional community of reading educators, work on a daily basis with teachers in classrooms, prospective teachers, clinicians, and tutors. Their goal for this book is to represent what they have learned about effective teaching and learning as members of this community. It is written with four purposes in mind: * to offer a principled conception of reading and learning to read that is considerate of both the personal dimensions of literacy acquisition as well as the changes that are taking place in society, * to summarize key findings from the research that relate specifically to effective teaching practices, * to describe current practices in reading instruction with specific comparisons to the principles of effective practice that are identified, and * to suggest an action agenda that is school-based and designed to promote positive changes in the quality of instruction. This text offers a perspective for teaching that provokes members of the reading education community to think about their underlying beliefs about teaching and their shared commitment to making schools more effective for the students they serve. It is envisioned as a resource to be used in building a community of learners--to be read with professional colleagues in a course of study, in a teacher-researcher book club, or in some type of in-service setting. Readers are encouraged to debate the ideas presented, to challenge the authors' conceptions with their own reality, to make sense within a community about what action is desirable. Some specific suggestions and strategies are provided as springboards for further exploration and action.


Principles of Expressive Reading

Principles of Expressive Reading

Author: Olaf Morgan Norlie

Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

Published: 2016-05-08

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13: 9781533165169

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Dr. Norlie read extensively in the preparation of his thesis, and writes as a student of books, rather than as one who has had experience in teaching or in public reading. His purpose is "to tell how to read aloud." "Expressive reading is the utterance of the message of a selection in a natural and effective way. By natural is meant that the utterance should be in the reader's conversational tone, or as near to it as the message and the occasion will permit. By effective is meant that the utterance shall be given with an emphasis suited to bring out the message for the occasion. By message is meant the thought and feeling and purpose of the author." In his preface he reviews the attempts that have been made to discover the principles underlying expressive reading, and the methods used to teach it; and in his thesis he develops four of these principles that he finds to be essential. These are, Getting a Perspective; Studying the Details; Drill; and Criticism. Getting the Perspective means a study of the author's life, character and relation to his times; the occasion and purpose of the selection; its thought and feeling; and its form. Studying the Details is finding the meaning and pronunciation of the words, their grouping, and the central idea of each' group. Drill is chiefly mental, recalling the setting, the contents and the exact words. Criticism is the comparison of the reading with the reader's conversational style. This is his criterion of expressive reading, and would naturally be the end of the thesis; but he adds twenty pages of description of the organs of speech, and finishes by giving more than a third of the book to phonetics. -The Princeton Theological Review, Vol. 17