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"Reading and Teaching" raises questions and provides a context for
preservice and practicing teachers to understand and to reflect on
the complex issues surrounding the teaching of reading in the
schools. It presents real teachers in their classrooms, dialogues
about that teaching, and exercises for further clarification. The
purpose is to help teachers make informed choices about their
teaching of reading. The text considers the different types of
decisions teachers might make in the teaching of reading and the
knowledge upon which they rely in making those decisions--not
simply factual information about using certain materials and
methods to teach reading, but also knowledge about the mind, the
political climate, the broader social and cultural circumstances of
their students and schools and the communities in which they teach.
"Reading and Teaching" is designed to engage teachers in beginning
to evolve their own practical theories, to help them explore and
perhaps modify some basic beliefs and assumptions, and to become
acquainted with other points of view. Readers are encouraged to
interact with the text and to develop their own perspective on the
teaching of reading. This is the fifth volume in "Reflective
Teaching and the Social Conditions of Schooling: A Series for
Prospective and Practicing Teachers," edited by Daniel P. Liston
and Kenneth M. Zeichner. It follows the same format as previous
volumes in the series.
*Part I includes four real-life cases of teachers' experiences in
the classroom: "Teaching Reading Via Direct Systematic
Instruction"; "A New Teacher Learns About Teaching Reading and
Culture"; "A Teacher-Constructed Whole Language Program"; and
"CriticalLiteracy in an Urban Middle School." Each case is followed
by space for readers to write their own reactions and reflections,
educators' dialogue about the case, space for readers' reactions to
the educators' dialogue, and a summary and additional questions.
*Part II presents three public arguments representing different
views about the teaching of reading: direct instruction, whole
language, and critical literacy.
*Part III offers the authors' own interpretations of the issues
raised throughout the text and some suggestions for further
reflection. A list of resources is provided.
This text is pertinent for all prospective and practicing teachers
at any stage in their teaching careers. It can be used in any
undergraduate or graduate course that addresses the teaching of
reading.
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