Synopses & Reviews
Some of the best-known authors in the field come together to provide teachers with fifty step-by-step procedures for implementing content area instructional routines to improve students’ literacy skills. 50 Instructional Routines to Develop Content Literacy, 3/e helps adolescents to become more successful readers. Middle and high school teachers can immediately put to use its practical information and real classroom examples from science, social studies, English, math, the visual and performing arts, and core electives to improve students’ reading, writing, and oral language development. Going above and beyond basic classroom strategies, the instructional routines recommend simple changes to teachers’ everyday procedures that foster student comprehension, such as thinking aloud, using question-answer relationships, and teaching with word walls.
The routines are:
- Selected to ensure that all students engage in reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing as part of the literacy process.
- Taken from real classrooms, real students, and real results.
- Organized for easy and quick referencing.
- Applicable to English learners and struggling readers.
This new edition features:
- NEW! More detailed classroom scenarios.
- NEW! New routines that address the Common Core State Standards.
- NEW! Up-to-date research reviews and references.
- NEW! A focus on additional content areas.
Review
"50 Instructional Routines to Develop Content Literacy is a valuable resource for teachers from all content areas to help students become better readers, writers, thinkers, collaborators, and communicators. The routines are grounded in sound research and pedagogy and the step-by-step directions and real-class/real-student examples and scenarios allow educators to move beyond theory to implementation. The short chapters allow for busy teachers to quickly sort through and select the best routines for any instructional purpose. The chapters also offer suggestions for differentiation, including for ELL students, so that the routines can be tailored to meet the needs of any group of students. This text is a toolbox that teachers from all content areas will find themselves referencing throughout the school year."
-- Lisa Lloyd, Hastings Middle School (Upper Arlington, Ohio)
"I found the material beneficial to me as a teacher and will definitely use some new techniques in with my students to improve literacy."
-- Danielle Morrison, Lincoln High School (Gahanna, Ohio)
"The organization of each routine is especially helpful: brief review of research, step-by-step guide, classroom examples, and relevant graphics, etc. It is refreshing to see a text that is so useful."
-- Tom Smyth, University of South Carolina Aiken
Synopsis
KEY BENEFIT Gives middle and secondary school teachers 50 evidence-based instructional routines to ensure reading and writing occurs in every class, across all content areas
KEY TOPICS 50 instructional routines; addressing the Common Core State Standards; focusing on the content areas; engaging students in reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing as part of the literacy process; English learners; and struggling readers
MARKET Middle and secondary school teachers; courses in Reading Methods and Content Area Reading
Synopsis
50 Instructional Routines to Develop Content Literacy, 3/e helps adolescents read more and read better. Middle and high school teachers can immediately put to use its practical information and classroom examples from science, social studies, English, math, the visual and performing arts, and core electives to improve students’ reading, writing, and oral language development. Going above and beyond basic classroom strategies, the instructional routines recommend simple changes to teachers’ everyday procedures that foster student comprehension, such as thinking aloud, using question-answer relationships, and teaching with word walls.
About the Author
Douglas Fisher, Ph.D.
is Professor of Educational Leadership at San Diego State University and a teacher leader at Health Sciences High & Middle College. He has published numerous articles on reading and literacy, differentiated instruction, and curriculum design as well as numerous books, including Good Habits, Great Readers; Improving Adolescent Literacy; Better Learning Through Structured Teaching; Common Core English Language Arts in a PLC at Work and Text Complexity: Raising Rigor in Reading.
William G. Brozo, Ph.D.
is a Professor of Literacy in the Graduate School of Education at George Mason University. A former high school English teacher, he is the author of numerous articles and books on literacy development for children and young adults. He is a contributing author to Pearson iLit, a digitally delivered program for struggling adolescent readers, and Pearson Literature. He regularly speaks at professional meetings around the country and consults with states and districts on ways of building capacity among teachers and enriching the literate culture of schools.
Nancy Frey, Ph.D.
is Professor of Educational Leadership at San Diego State University and a teacher leader at Health Sciences High & Middle College. She has published numerous articles on literacy, diverse learners, and instructional design as well as numerous books, including Good Habits, Great Readers; Improving Adolescent Literacy; Checking for Understanding; Rigorous Reading and The Path to Get There.
Gay Ivey, Ph.D.
is the Tashia F. Morgridge Chair in Reading at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She earned her doctorate in Reading Education at the University of Georgia. She studies the implications and processes of classroom communities that prioritize engagement in literacy practices. Before entering the world of academia, she was a middle school reading specialist in Virginia.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
1) Adjunct Displays
2) Annotation
3) Anticipation Guides
4) Close Reading
5) Collaborative Conversations
6) Conversation Roundtable
7) Debate
8) Directed Reading-Thinking Activity
9) Exit Slips
10) Fishbowl Discussions
11) Found Poems
12) Generative Reading
13) Guest Speakers
14) Independent Reading
15) Interest Surveys, Questionnaires, and Interviews
16) Jigsaw
17) KWL
18) Language Experience Approach
19) Mnemonics
20) Modeling Comprehension
21) Numbered Heads Together
22) Opinionnaire
23) Popcorn Review
24) Questioning the Author
25) Question-Answer Relationship
26) RAFT Writing
27) Read-Alouds
28) Readers’ Theatre
29) Read-Write-Pair-Share
30) Reciprocal Teaching
31) ReQuest
32) Response Writing
33) Shades of Meaning
34) Shared Reading
35) Socratic Seminar
36) Split-Page Notetaking
37) Student Booktalks
38) Student Questions for Purposeful Learning
39) Text Impressions
40) Text Structures
41) Text-Dependent Questions
42) Think-Alouds
43) Tossed Terms
44) Vocabulary Cards
45) Vocabulary Self-Awareness
46) Word Grids/Semantic Feature Analysis
47) Word Scavenger Hunts
48) Word Sorts
49) Word Walls
50) Writing Frames and Templates