Handbook of Effective Literacy Instruction: Research-Based Practice K-8

Handbook of Effective Literacy Instruction: Research-Based Practice K-8

by Barbara Taylor (Editor), NellDuke (Editor)

Synopsis

This highly readable handbook synthesizes the best research on K-8 literacy instruction and distills key implications for classroom practice. Noted contributors provide clear recommendations for creating effective, motivating classroom environments; teaching core components of literacy; integrating literacy with content-area instruction; and building a schoolwide literacy program that helps all students succeed. Helpful figures, tables, resource lists, reflection questions, and concrete examples from real classrooms make the book an ideal tool for teacher training and professional development. Numerous reproducible worksheets and checklists can be downloaded and printed in a convenient 8 1/2 x 11 size.

$56.75

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1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 625
Publisher: Guilford Press
Published: 17 Sep 2014

ISBN 10: 1462519245
ISBN 13: 9781462519248

Media Reviews
This is what a handbook should be! The range of topics regarding effective literacy instruction is comprehensive. The information provided is accessible and state of the art. The authors address fundamental components of literacy lessons as well as specific teaching practices for meeting the needs of heterogeneous classrooms of students. I look forward to teaching with this volume in the literacy methods course in our elementary teacher education program. --Annemarie Sullivan Palincsar, PhD, Jean and Charles Walgreen Chair of Reading and Literacy, University of Michigan

This brilliantly organized handbook is a treasure trove of important information, provided in an eminently usable format. Today's teachers want to know what the research says about important questions of practice, but are often stymied by research articles lacking in practical application. This volume is written expressly for educators in search of fresh, research-supported tactics to engage students in meaningful literacy work. Readers will find extremely valuable suggestions for their classrooms and for facilitating colleagues' learning. I fully expect to see this book on the desks of teachers, literacy leaders, and principals around the country--it will absolutely remain in a prominent place on my own! --Ellin O. Keene, MA, education consultant and author, Denver, Colorado

A terrific addition to the literature. The consistent structure across the chapters makes the content particularly accessible, with implications for instruction front and center. Cross-referencing among the chapters is also handled well. The range of topics covered includes basic literacy processes as well as 21st-century literacies and the contexts in which literacy is taught and used. The Handbook demonstrates just how rich the field of literacy research has been, and how much we know about teaching and learning that can support excellent practices across grade levels and school subjects. --Taffy E. Raphael, PhD, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, University of Illinois at Chicago

Taylor and Duke have assembled a first-rate team of researchers and teacher educators who address the critical issues facing practitioners today, in a way that is both research based and highly accessible. This volume is an excellent text for courses in literacy education and a key resource for professional development activities. --Dorothy S. Strickland, PhD, Samuel DeWitt Proctor Professor of Education Emerita, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

I'm using this text in my graduate-level Foundations of Literacy course. I reviewed a variety of texts on literacy instruction aligned with CCSS and beyond, and this one was the best! It offers the perfect balance between theory and practice, providing the knowledge needed to make the kinds of instructional decisions that will lead to positive student outcomes. My students use the text as a core required reading text, we discuss it in class, and they use it as a guide to write their reflections about what they are observing in the field. The book is easy to read for new teachers and has a depth of knowledge that veteran teachers are hungry for. --Eugenia Mora-Flores, EdD, Rossier School of Education, University of Southern California
Author Bio
Barbara M. Taylor, EdD, is Professor Emerita of Literacy Education at the University of Minnesota, where she is also founder and past director of the Minnesota Center for Reading Research. A member of the Reading Hall of Fame, she is a recipient of the Oscar S. Causey Award from the National Reading Conference (NRC, now the Literacy Research Association) and the Albert J. Harris Award and the Outstanding Teacher Educator Award from the International Reading Association (IRA). Dr. Taylor's research interests include reading comprehension and high-level talk and writing about text, elementary schoolwide reading improvement, early reading intervention, and the elements of effective instruction that contribute to children's success in reading. She has published numerous books, book chapters, and journal articles. Nell K. Duke, EdD, is Professor of Language, Literacy, and Culture and an affiliate of the Combined Program in Education and Psychology at the University of Michigan. She is a recipient of honors including early career awards from the American Educational Research Association and the NRC, the Dina Feitelson Research Award from the IRA, and the Promising Researcher Award from the National Council of Teachers of English. Dr. Duke's research interests include the development of informational reading and writing in young children, comprehension development and instruction in early schooling, and issues of equity in literacy education. She is coauthor or coeditor of several books and has published numerous journal articles.