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This volume is an attempt to synthesize the understandings we have
about reading to learn. Although learning at all ages is discussed
in this volume, the main focus is on middle and high school
classrooms--critical spaces of learning and thinking.
The amount of knowledge presented in written form is increasing,
and the information we get from texts is often conflicting. We are
in a knowledge explosion that leaves us reeling and may effectively
disenfranchise those who are not keeping up. There has never been a
more crucial time for students to understand, learn from, and think
critically about the information in various forms of text. Thus,
understanding what it means to learn is vital for all educators.
Learning from text is a complex matter that includes student
factors (social, ethnic, and cultural differences, as well as
varying motivations, self-perceptions, goals, and needs);
instructional and teacher factors; and disciplinary and social
factors.
One important goal of the book is to encourage practicing teachers
to learn to consider their students in new ways--to see them as
being influenced by, and as influencing, not just the classroom but
the total fabric of the disciplines they are learning. Equally
important, it is intended to foster further research efforts--from
local studies of classrooms by teachers to large-scale studies that
produce generalizable understandings about learning from text.
This volume--a result of the editor's and contributors' work with
the National Reading Research Center--will be of interest to all
researchers, graduate students, practicing teachers, and teachers
in training who are interested in understanding the issues that are
central to improving students' learning from text.
This volume is an attempt to synthesize the understandings we have
about reading to learn. Although learning at all ages is discussed
in this volume, the main focus is on middle and high school
classrooms--critical spaces of learning and thinking.
The amount of knowledge presented in written form is increasing,
and the information we get from texts is often conflicting. We are
in a knowledge explosion that leaves us reeling and may effectively
disenfranchise those who are not keeping up. There has never been a
more crucial time for students to understand, learn from, and think
critically about the information in various forms of text. Thus,
understanding what it means to learn is vital for all educators.
Learning from text is a complex matter that includes student
factors (social, ethnic, and cultural differences, as well as
varying motivations, self-perceptions, goals, and needs);
instructional and teacher factors; and disciplinary and social
factors.
One important goal of the book is to encourage practicing teachers
to learn to consider their students in new ways--to see them as
being influenced by, and as influencing, not just the classroom but
the total fabric of the disciplines they are learning. Equally
important, it is intended to foster further research efforts--from
local studies of classrooms by teachers to large-scale studies that
produce generalizable understandings about learning from text.
This volume--a result of the editor's and contributors' work with
the National Reading Research Center--will be of interest to all
researchers, graduate students, practicing teachers, and teachers
in training who are interested in understanding the issues that are
central to improving students' learning from text.
"Perspectives on Conceptual Change" presents case study excerpts
illustrating the influence on and processes of students' conceptual
change, and analyses of these cases from multiple theoretical
frameworks.
Researchers in reading education have been investigating conceptual
change and the effects of students' prior knowledge on their
learning for more than a decade. During this time, this research
had been changing from the general and cognitive--average effects
of interventions on groups of students--to the specific and
personal--individuals' reactions to and conceptual change with text
structures. Studies in this area have begun to focus on the social,
contextual, and affective influences on conceptual change. These
studies have potential to be informed by other discourses.
Hence, this book shows the results of sharing data--in the form of
case study excerpts--with researchers representing varying
perspectives of analyses. Instances of learning are examined from
cross disciplinary views. Case study authors in turn respond to the
case analyses. The result is a text that provides multiple insights
into understanding the learning process and the conditions that
impact learning.
"Perspectives on Conceptual Change" presents case study excerpts
illustrating the influence on and processes of students' conceptual
change, and analyses of these cases from multiple theoretical
frameworks.
Researchers in reading education have been investigating conceptual
change and the effects of students' prior knowledge on their
learning for more than a decade. During this time, this research
had been changing from the general and cognitive--average effects
of interventions on groups of students--to the specific and
personal--individuals' reactions to and conceptual change with text
structures. Studies in this area have begun to focus on the social,
contextual, and affective influences on conceptual change. These
studies have potential to be informed by other discourses.
Hence, this book shows the results of sharing data--in the form of
case study excerpts--with researchers representing varying
perspectives of analyses. Instances of learning are examined from
cross disciplinary views. Case study authors in turn respond to the
case analyses. The result is a text that provides multiple insights
into understanding the learning process and the conditions that
impact learning.
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