|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
Teaching the Dimensions of Literacy provides both the conceptual
knowledge to support teachers' instructional decisions in the
reading/literacy classroom and a multitude of instructional
strategy lessons for classroom use with both monolingual and
bilingual students. It proposes that teachers need to help children
become code breakers (the linguistic dimension), meaning makers
(the cognitive dimension), text users and critics (the
sociocultural dimension), and scientists (the developmental
dimension). Acknowledging and addressing all four dimensions, this
text links literacy theory, literacy research, and literacy
practice in a useable way. Covering both reading and writing, it
features clear, concise, and useable reading and writing strategy
lessons and ways to modify them for different types of students.
Changes in the Second Edition: Entirely reorganized, the text is
more user friendly, builds a stronger link between theory and
practice, and makes it is easier for teachers to locate appropriate
strategy lessons to use with their students. Academic literacy is
addressed more fully.
Teaching the Dimensions of Literacy provides both the conceptual
knowledge to support teachers' instructional decisions in the
reading/literacy classroom and a multitude of instructional
strategy lessons for classroom use with both monolingual and
bilingual students. It proposes that teachers need to help children
become code breakers (the linguistic dimension), meaning makers
(the cognitive dimension), text users and critics (the
sociocultural dimension), and scientists (the developmental
dimension). Acknowledging and addressing all four dimensions, this
text links literacy theory, literacy research, and literacy
practice in a useable way. Covering both reading and writing, it
features clear, concise, and useable reading and writing strategy
lessons and ways to modify them for different types of students.
Changes in the Second Edition: Entirely reorganized, the text is
more user friendly, builds a stronger link between theory and
practice, and makes it is easier for teachers to locate appropriate
strategy lessons to use with their students. Academic literacy is
addressed more fully.
|
|