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The Common Core Standards have recently been adopted in most states
across the nation and teachers are in the process of getting to the
core of these standards. Teaching to standards is not a new
concept; teachers have adapted to new standards every few years for
quite some time. And teachers are adaptable, as can be seen in this
book. We are writing this book to demonstrate how teachers use
research-based strategies to meet Common Core Standards while still
focusing on students. Our goal is to help teachers visualize
students in action as other teachers describe the implementation of
research-based strategies in their own classrooms, show student
work samples, and provide reflections of student success in
achieving the standards. Many Common Core Standards books focus on
the standards, but our approach focuses on strategies that engage
the students in the classroom--showing how different teachers at
varying grade levels have used the strategies to meet the
standards. With this focus, we believe that teachers gain a new and
positive perspective on approaching the new standards and see the
flexibility of strategies for meeting standards across subject
areas. We have examined research on the strategies with the purpose
of giving teachers a brief description of why these strategies work
before giving actual examples from classrooms. We also work closely
with teachers in the public schools and have our finger on the
pulse of what is happening in the public schools-one of the current
stressors being unpacking the Common Core Standards. This book
actually focuses on practice. We begin by laying out a rationale in
our first chapter - The Core Value(s) of Education. Then, each
chapter focuses on a strategy, including 1) a brief description
about the research supporting each strategy and 2) several examples
from different greade levels, which include a description of how
the strategy was used, student work samples, and a reflection on
the use of the strategy. The research descriptions are fairly short
because, while we believe professional educators (aka teachers, in
this case) should know the research that supports practice, we know
they are not typically interested in long diatribes about the
research.
A volume in Literacy, Language, and Learning Series Editor Patricia
Ruggiano Schmidt, Our goal in writing this book was to validate
teachers for strong efforts in their life's work. We often observe
teachers' frustrations with what they perceive to be a multitude of
different ""hot topics"" in education that they must attend to now,
but which they expect to come and go, like the last ""hot topics.""
So, we wanted to help readers see similarities between many of
these ""hot topics""-differentiation, multiple intelligences,
culturally responsive teaching, ""brain-friendly"" strategies,
authentic assessment, and ethical classroom management- which we
feel are not ""flashes in the pan."" And we trust that serious
practitioners will not oversimplify the findings of neuroscientists
and their application to education. Reading studies and books by
scientists, a number of which are user-friendly, can help ensure
that teachers separate the hype from credible information. We have
seen this professionally judicious approach in the work of graduate
students (Kolinski, 2007) in adopting ""brain-friendly""
strategies. We have intentionally packed both
theoretical/research-based and practical information in this book
because professional educators want to know why they should use
certain approaches, models, and strategies. In turn, as
professionals, we should be able to explain why we teach the way we
do-not to justify, but to educate others about our knowledge-based,
reflective, decision-making processes and the impact on student
learning. Thus, it is important to read Chapter 1 because it lays a
foundation. Each succeeding chapter (2-6) has unique and compelling
twists and turns-chock full of ideas to use or to adapt. It is
possible to gain lots of ideas, processes, and strategies from
reading and implementing (or adapting) even one of the unit
chapters, or a part of it. While some of the units are explicitly
about literacy, others focus on content using reading, writing,
speaking, and listening as critical in the learning process. Thus,
literacy skills are reinforced and strengthened. Additionally, some
of our colleagues and public school partners have given us feedback
that they wanted to implement some of the units and activities
themselves. So, feel free to use this book for self-exploration and
professional development.
This book offers ideas that secondary teachers, university content
faculty, and teacher educators can use to challenge traditional
literacy practices and demonstrate creative, innovative ways of
incorporating new literacies into the classroom, all within a
strong theoretical framework. Teachers are trying to catch up to
the new challenges of the twenty-first century. It is a superheroic
feat that must be achieved if education is to stay relevant and
viable. There is a lot of zip, bam, whap, and wow in the
fast-paced, social networking, technological world, but not so much
in the often laboriously slow-paced educational world. Where is the
balance? How do teachers and students learn together, since one
group has seasoned wisdom with limited technological know-how and
the other uses all the cool new tools, but not in the service of
learning? These are some important issues to consider in finding
the balance in an unstable, fast-moving, ever-changing world. This
book is practical and useful to literacy teachers, teacher
educators, and university faculty by bringing together the
expertise of composition/rhetoric researchers and writers, literacy
specialists, technology specialists, and teachers who are on the
cutting edge of new literacies.
The Common Core Standards have recently been adopted in most states
across the nation and teachers are in the process of getting to the
core of these standards. Teaching to standards is not a new
concept; teachers have adapted to new standards every few years for
quite some time. And teachers are adaptable, as can be seen in this
book. We are writing this book to demonstrate how teachers use
research-based strategies to meet Common Core Standards while still
focusing on students. Our goal is to help teachers visualize
students in action as other teachers describe the implementation of
research-based strategies in their own classrooms, show student
work samples, and provide reflections of student success in
achieving the standards. Many Common Core Standards books focus on
the standards, but our approach focuses on strategies that engage
the students in the classroom--showing how different teachers at
varying grade levels have used the strategies to meet the
standards. With this focus, we believe that teachers gain a new and
positive perspective on approaching the new standards and see the
flexibility of strategies for meeting standards across subject
areas. We have examined research on the strategies with the purpose
of giving teachers a brief description of why these strategies work
before giving actual examples from classrooms. We also work closely
with teachers in the public schools and have our finger on the
pulse of what is happening in the public schools-one of the current
stressors being unpacking the Common Core Standards. This book
actually focuses on practice. We begin by laying out a rationale in
our first chapter - The Core Value(s) of Education. Then, each
chapter focuses on a strategy, including 1) a brief description
about the research supporting each strategy and 2) several examples
from different greade levels, which include a description of how
the strategy was used, student work samples, and a reflection on
the use of the strategy. The research descriptions are fairly short
because, while we believe professional educators (aka teachers, in
this case) should know the research that supports practice, we know
they are not typically interested in long diatribes about the
research.
This book offers ideas that secondary teachers, university content
faculty, and teacher educators can use to challenge traditional
literacy practices and demonstrate creative, innovative ways of
incorporating new literacies into the classroom, all within a
strong theoretical framework. Teachers are trying to catch up to
the new challenges of the twenty-first century. It is a superheroic
feat that must be achieved if education is to stay relevant and
viable. There is a lot of zip, bam, whap, and wow in the
fast-paced, social networking, technological world, but not so much
in the often laboriously slow-paced educational world. Where is the
balance? How do teachers and students learn together, since one
group has seasoned wisdom with limited technological know-how and
the other uses all the cool new tools, but not in the service of
learning? These are some important issues to consider in finding
the balance in an unstable, fast-moving, ever-changing world. This
book is practical and useful to literacy teachers, teacher
educators, and university faculty by bringing together the
expertise of composition/rhetoric researchers and writers, literacy
specialists, technology specialists, and teachers who are on the
cutting edge of new literacies.
A volume in Literacy, Language, and Learning Series Editor Patricia
Ruggiano Schmidt, Our goal in writing this book was to validate
teachers for strong efforts in their life's work. We often observe
teachers' frustrations with what they perceive to be a multitude of
different ""hot topics"" in education that they must attend to now,
but which they expect to come and go, like the last ""hot topics.""
So, we wanted to help readers see similarities between many of
these ""hot topics""-differentiation, multiple intelligences,
culturally responsive teaching, ""brain-friendly"" strategies,
authentic assessment, and ethical classroom management- which we
feel are not ""flashes in the pan."" And we trust that serious
practitioners will not oversimplify the findings of neuroscientists
and their application to education. Reading studies and books by
scientists, a number of which are user-friendly, can help ensure
that teachers separate the hype from credible information. We have
seen this professionally judicious approach in the work of graduate
students (Kolinski, 2007) in adopting ""brain-friendly""
strategies. We have intentionally packed both
theoretical/research-based and practical information in this book
because professional educators want to know why they should use
certain approaches, models, and strategies. In turn, as
professionals, we should be able to explain why we teach the way we
do-not to justify, but to educate others about our knowledge-based,
reflective, decision-making processes and the impact on student
learning. Thus, it is important to read Chapter 1 because it lays a
foundation. Each succeeding chapter (2-6) has unique and compelling
twists and turns-chock full of ideas to use or to adapt. It is
possible to gain lots of ideas, processes, and strategies from
reading and implementing (or adapting) even one of the unit
chapters, or a part of it. While some of the units are explicitly
about literacy, others focus on content using reading, writing,
speaking, and listening as critical in the learning process. Thus,
literacy skills are reinforced and strengthened. Additionally, some
of our colleagues and public school partners have given us feedback
that they wanted to implement some of the units and activities
themselves. So, feel free to use this book for self-exploration and
professional development.
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