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Conversation was not invented to help people choose right answers
on tests. It evolved to solve problems, build ideas, build
relationships, and understand others and the world. Yet despite its
power to grow minds and hearts, effective conversations are still
too scarce in our schools. Jeff Zwiers, an educational researcher
at Stanford University, has spent the last 15 years analyzing
classroom conversations to see how they can be better used and
improved in classroom settings. Teachers who have worked with him
report significant growth in students' engagement, content
learning, language, creativity, and sense of agency. Jeff shared
his initial vision for classroom conversations in his 2011 book,
Academic Conversations. In this follow-up book, Next Steps with
Academic Conversations, he builds on those original ideas by
offering an updated synthesis of conversation work across
disciplines and grade levels, highlights of the most recent
classroom-based research and theory on classroom conversation,
answers to questions that have emerged during this work with
teachers and administrators, and new classroom strategies and
practices for fostering and assessing classroom conversations. This
resource is the product of his extensive research, co-teaching, and
collaborating with a wide range of educators. It was written for
busy teachers who want a practical guide for strengthening the
quality and quantity of productive conversations in their lessons.
This book focuses on how parents and other caregivers can have
richer and more fruitful conversations with their children. Parents
will be able to use the ideas in this book to improve conversations
with their children in ways that help them (a) more effectively
learn in school, (b) develop stronger and more lasting
relationships in and out of school, and (c) increase their critical
thinking and problem-solving abilities. Some children are more
prepared for school than others. Much of this preparation comes
from the types of conversations that children have and listen to at
home. Many children need more practice in developing and using key
conversation skills that are expected in school and life. They need
more practice co-constructing ideas with other people, face to
face, and they need more practice engaging in respectful
collaboration and argumentation. This book helps parents to provide
such practice.
"For thousands of years people have been using the skills we
describe in this book to engage in conversations with others. What
isn't as prevalent, however, is instruction--especially in primary
grades-in which we engage students in productive conversations
about academic ideas. This book fills that very big need." --Jeff
Zwiers & Sara Hamerla Talk about content mastery . . . Primary
teachers, you won't want to miss this: if you're looking for a
single resource to foster purposeful content discussions and
high-quality interpersonal engagement, then put Jeff Zwiers and
Sara Hamerla's K-3 Guide to Academic Conversations at the top of
your reading list. Whether your students love to talk or not, all
must be equipped with key conversation skills such as active
listening, taking turns, posing, clarifying, supporting with
examples, and arguing ideas. This ready resource comes packed with
every imaginable tool you could need to make academic conversations
part of your everyday teaching: Sample lesson plans and anchor
charts Guidelines for creating effective prompts Applications
across content areas, with corresponding assessments Rubrics and
protocols for listening to student speech Transcripts of
conversations and questions for reflection Companion website with
video and downloadable resources Tens of thousands of students in
the upper grades have reaped the benefits of academic
conversations: high-quality face-to-face interactions, increased
motivation, stronger collaborative argumentation skills, and better
understanding and retention of content. The K-3 Guide to Academic
Conversations is that resource for providing your primary students
with the same powerful learning opportunities.
The "communication effect" is what happens when we saturate our
classrooms with authentic communication, which occurs when students
use language to build up ideas and do meaningful things. For
starters, authentic communication deepens and increases language
development, learning of content concepts and skills, rigor and
engagement, empathy and understanding of others' perspectives,
agency and ownership of core ideas across disciplines, and social
and emotional skills for building strong relationships. And these
are just the starters. With The Communication Effect, Dr. Jeff
Zwiers challenges teachers in Grades 3 and up to focus less on
breadth and more on depth by grounding instruction and assessment
in authentic (rather than pseudo-) communication. This book
provides: Ideas for cultivating classroom cultures in which
authentic communication thrives Clear descriptions and examples of
the three features of authentic communication: 1. building up key
ideas (claims and concepts); 2. clarifying terms and supporting
ideas; and 3. creating and filling information gaps Over 175
suggestions for using the three features of authentic communication
to enhance twenty commonly used instructional activities across
disciplines Additional examples of not-so-commonly-used activities
that embody the three features Suggestions for improving four
different types of teacher creativity needed to design effective
lessons, activities, and assessments that maximize authentic
communication Our students deserve to get the most out of each
minute of each lesson. Authentic communication can help. As you
read The Communication Effect and apply its ideas, you will see how
much better equipped and inspired your students are to grow into
the amazing and gifted people that they were meant to become.
By now it's a given: if we're to help our ELLs and SELs access the
rigorous demands of today's content standards, we must cultivate
the "code" that drives school success: academic language. Look no
further for assistance than this much-anticipated series from
Ivannia Soto, in which she invites field authorities Jeff Zwiers,
David and Yvonne Freeman, Margarita Calderon, and Noma LeMoine to
share every teacher's need-to-know strategies on the four essential
components of academic language. The subject of this volume is
conversational discourse. Here, Jeff Zwiers reveals the power of
academic conversation in helping students develop language, clarify
concepts, comprehend complex texts, and fortify thinking and
relational skills. With this book as your roadmap, you'll learn how
to: Foster the skills and language students must develop for
productive interactions Implement strategies for scaffolding paired
conversations Assess student's oral language development as you go
It's imperative that our ELLs and SELs practice academic language
in rich conversations with others in school, especially when our
classrooms may be their only opportunities to receive modeling,
scaffolding, and feedback focused on effective discourse. This
book, in concert with the other three volumes in the series, can
provide both a foundation and a framework for accelerating the
learning of diverse students across grade levels and disciplines.
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