Elaine K McEwan-Adkins
Seven Strategies of Highly Effective Readers
Using Cognitive Research to Boost K-8 Achievement
Elaine K McEwan-Adkins
Seven Strategies of Highly Effective Readers
Using Cognitive Research to Boost K-8 Achievement
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book uses the research base on cognition, reading comprehension and retention. It defines strategic reading instruction, describes what a cognitive strategy is, explains the important ways that strategies differ from instructional activities and reading skills, and briefly introduces the seven cognitive strategies that highly effective readers routinely use. Seven Strategies of Highly Effective Readers also focuses on specific research-based teaching practices that will help students mature into highly effective readers. A variety of K-8 instructional activities successfully teach the…mehr
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Joanna MeridethMush Mush -Sight Word Readers17,99 €
- Jo Anne VasquezTools & Traits for Highly Effective Science Teaching, K-833,99 €
- Gravity GoldbergWhat Do I Teach Readers Tomorrow? Nonfiction, Grades 3-843,99 €
- Deborah SchecterFirst Little Readers: Guided Reading Level a (Classroom Set): A Big Collection of Just-Right Leveled Books for Beginning Readers77,99 €
- Life LeadershipPoint and Grunt: Highly Effective Communication for Leaders and Teams16,99 €
- Kim JacobsStronger Families, Stronger Communities: 20 Years of Highly Effective Teaching Practices Supporting Two-Generation Learning32,99 €
- Rod CourtneyThe 8 Habits of a Highly Effective Safety Culture26,99 €
-
-
-
This book uses the research base on cognition, reading comprehension and retention. It defines strategic reading instruction, describes what a cognitive strategy is, explains the important ways that strategies differ from instructional activities and reading skills, and briefly introduces the seven cognitive strategies that highly effective readers routinely use. Seven Strategies of Highly Effective Readers also focuses on specific research-based teaching practices that will help students mature into highly effective readers. A variety of K-8 instructional activities successfully teach the strategies, although the activities can be altered to fit any teaching style and grade level. The book concludes with a discussion of school-wide strategic reading instruction for wider implementation.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Sage Publications
- Seitenzahl: 224
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. April 2004
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 282mm x 214mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 535g
- ISBN-13: 9780761946212
- ISBN-10: 0761946217
- Artikelnr.: 21844279
- Verlag: Sage Publications
- Seitenzahl: 224
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. April 2004
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 282mm x 214mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 535g
- ISBN-13: 9780761946212
- ISBN-10: 0761946217
- Artikelnr.: 21844279
Elaine K. McEwan is an educational consultant with The McEwan-Adkins Group, offering professional development for educators to assist them in meeting the challenges of literacy learning in Grades Pre K-6. A former teacher, librarian, principal, and assistant superintendent for instruction in several suburban Chicago school districts, Elaine is the award-winning and best-selling author of more than three dozen books for educators. Her Corwin Press titles include Raising Reading Achievement in Middle and High Schools: Five Simple-to-Follow Strategies for Principals, Second Edition (2006), Seven Strategies of Highly Effective Readers: Using Cognitive Research to Boost K-8 Achievement (2004), Ten Traits of Highly Effective Principals: From Good to Great Performance (2003), Making Sense of Research: What's Good, What's Not, and How to Tell the Difference (2003), Seven Steps to Effective Instructional Leadership, Second Edition (2003), Teach Them ALL to Read: Catching the Kids Who Fall through the Cracks (2002), and Ten Traits of Highly Effective Teachers: How to Hire, Mentor, and Coach Successful Teachers (2001). McEwan was honored by the Illinois Principals Association as an outstanding instructional leader, by the Illinois State Board of Education with an Award of Excellence in the Those Who Excel Program, and by the National Association of Elementary School Principals as the National Distinguished Principal from Illinois for 1991. She received her undergraduate degree in education from Wheaton College and advanced degrees in library science (MA) and educational administration (EdD) from Northern Illinois University.
Preface About the Author The Goals of the Book Special Features of the Book Who the Book is for Overview of the Contents Acknowledgments 1. The Power of Strategic Reading Instruction What is Strategic Reading? What is Strategic Reading Instruction (SRI) What are the Seven Strategies of Highly Effective Readers? What are the Prerequisites for Strategic Reading Instruction? When is a Strategy not a Strategy? What
s Ahead? 2. Becoming a Strategic Teacher What Does a Strategic Teacher Look Like? The Teaching Moves of a Strategic Teacher The Challenges of Strategic Reading Instruction The Benefits of SRI What
s Ahead? 3. Understanding the Seven Strategies Cognitive Strategy #1: Activating Cognitive Strategy #2: Inferring Cognitive Strategy #3: Monitoring-Clarifying Cognitive Strategy #4: Questioning Cognitive Strategy #5: Searching-Selecting Cognitive Strategy #6: Summarizing Cognitive Strategy #7: Visualizing-Organizing What
s Ahead? 4. Instructional Activities to Engage Your Students Turn on Your CPU (Central Processing Unit): Grades 1-8 Turn on Your Math CPU (Central Processing Unit): Grades 4-8 Add it up: Grades 3-8 A Dozen Ways to Infer: Grades 3-8 A Dozen Ways to Say Infer: Grades 4-8 Fix-up Your Mix-ups: Grades 1-8 Do You Have Any Questions? Grades 4-8 The Prospector: Grades 4-8 The Summarizers Five C
s: Grades 3-8 Visualize a Video: Grades K-2 It Pays to Increase Your Word Power: Grades 2-8 Organize it: Grades 3-8 What
s Ahead? 5. Organizing for Strategic Reading Instruction (SRI) in Your Classroom When Should Strategy Instruction Begin? How Should I Introduce SRI to My Students? Do I Have to Think Aloud? How Should SRI Be Paced and Sequenced? What if an Instructional Activity Doesn
t Work? How Will I Know if My Students are Using the Strategies? Where Will I Find Time for SRI? How Can I Juggle It All? What Does a Lesson Look Like? What
s Ahead? 6. Implementing Schoolwide Strategic Reading Instruction SRI Requires a Pervasive and Persuasive Reading Culture SRI Requires Balanced Instruction SRI Requires a Research-based Curriculum Is Your School or District Ready for SRI? Conclusion References Index
s Ahead? 2. Becoming a Strategic Teacher What Does a Strategic Teacher Look Like? The Teaching Moves of a Strategic Teacher The Challenges of Strategic Reading Instruction The Benefits of SRI What
s Ahead? 3. Understanding the Seven Strategies Cognitive Strategy #1: Activating Cognitive Strategy #2: Inferring Cognitive Strategy #3: Monitoring-Clarifying Cognitive Strategy #4: Questioning Cognitive Strategy #5: Searching-Selecting Cognitive Strategy #6: Summarizing Cognitive Strategy #7: Visualizing-Organizing What
s Ahead? 4. Instructional Activities to Engage Your Students Turn on Your CPU (Central Processing Unit): Grades 1-8 Turn on Your Math CPU (Central Processing Unit): Grades 4-8 Add it up: Grades 3-8 A Dozen Ways to Infer: Grades 3-8 A Dozen Ways to Say Infer: Grades 4-8 Fix-up Your Mix-ups: Grades 1-8 Do You Have Any Questions? Grades 4-8 The Prospector: Grades 4-8 The Summarizers Five C
s: Grades 3-8 Visualize a Video: Grades K-2 It Pays to Increase Your Word Power: Grades 2-8 Organize it: Grades 3-8 What
s Ahead? 5. Organizing for Strategic Reading Instruction (SRI) in Your Classroom When Should Strategy Instruction Begin? How Should I Introduce SRI to My Students? Do I Have to Think Aloud? How Should SRI Be Paced and Sequenced? What if an Instructional Activity Doesn
t Work? How Will I Know if My Students are Using the Strategies? Where Will I Find Time for SRI? How Can I Juggle It All? What Does a Lesson Look Like? What
s Ahead? 6. Implementing Schoolwide Strategic Reading Instruction SRI Requires a Pervasive and Persuasive Reading Culture SRI Requires Balanced Instruction SRI Requires a Research-based Curriculum Is Your School or District Ready for SRI? Conclusion References Index
Preface About the Author The Goals of the Book Special Features of the Book Who the Book is for Overview of the Contents Acknowledgments 1. The Power of Strategic Reading Instruction What is Strategic Reading? What is Strategic Reading Instruction (SRI) What are the Seven Strategies of Highly Effective Readers? What are the Prerequisites for Strategic Reading Instruction? When is a Strategy not a Strategy? What
s Ahead? 2. Becoming a Strategic Teacher What Does a Strategic Teacher Look Like? The Teaching Moves of a Strategic Teacher The Challenges of Strategic Reading Instruction The Benefits of SRI What
s Ahead? 3. Understanding the Seven Strategies Cognitive Strategy #1: Activating Cognitive Strategy #2: Inferring Cognitive Strategy #3: Monitoring-Clarifying Cognitive Strategy #4: Questioning Cognitive Strategy #5: Searching-Selecting Cognitive Strategy #6: Summarizing Cognitive Strategy #7: Visualizing-Organizing What
s Ahead? 4. Instructional Activities to Engage Your Students Turn on Your CPU (Central Processing Unit): Grades 1-8 Turn on Your Math CPU (Central Processing Unit): Grades 4-8 Add it up: Grades 3-8 A Dozen Ways to Infer: Grades 3-8 A Dozen Ways to Say Infer: Grades 4-8 Fix-up Your Mix-ups: Grades 1-8 Do You Have Any Questions? Grades 4-8 The Prospector: Grades 4-8 The Summarizers Five C
s: Grades 3-8 Visualize a Video: Grades K-2 It Pays to Increase Your Word Power: Grades 2-8 Organize it: Grades 3-8 What
s Ahead? 5. Organizing for Strategic Reading Instruction (SRI) in Your Classroom When Should Strategy Instruction Begin? How Should I Introduce SRI to My Students? Do I Have to Think Aloud? How Should SRI Be Paced and Sequenced? What if an Instructional Activity Doesn
t Work? How Will I Know if My Students are Using the Strategies? Where Will I Find Time for SRI? How Can I Juggle It All? What Does a Lesson Look Like? What
s Ahead? 6. Implementing Schoolwide Strategic Reading Instruction SRI Requires a Pervasive and Persuasive Reading Culture SRI Requires Balanced Instruction SRI Requires a Research-based Curriculum Is Your School or District Ready for SRI? Conclusion References Index
s Ahead? 2. Becoming a Strategic Teacher What Does a Strategic Teacher Look Like? The Teaching Moves of a Strategic Teacher The Challenges of Strategic Reading Instruction The Benefits of SRI What
s Ahead? 3. Understanding the Seven Strategies Cognitive Strategy #1: Activating Cognitive Strategy #2: Inferring Cognitive Strategy #3: Monitoring-Clarifying Cognitive Strategy #4: Questioning Cognitive Strategy #5: Searching-Selecting Cognitive Strategy #6: Summarizing Cognitive Strategy #7: Visualizing-Organizing What
s Ahead? 4. Instructional Activities to Engage Your Students Turn on Your CPU (Central Processing Unit): Grades 1-8 Turn on Your Math CPU (Central Processing Unit): Grades 4-8 Add it up: Grades 3-8 A Dozen Ways to Infer: Grades 3-8 A Dozen Ways to Say Infer: Grades 4-8 Fix-up Your Mix-ups: Grades 1-8 Do You Have Any Questions? Grades 4-8 The Prospector: Grades 4-8 The Summarizers Five C
s: Grades 3-8 Visualize a Video: Grades K-2 It Pays to Increase Your Word Power: Grades 2-8 Organize it: Grades 3-8 What
s Ahead? 5. Organizing for Strategic Reading Instruction (SRI) in Your Classroom When Should Strategy Instruction Begin? How Should I Introduce SRI to My Students? Do I Have to Think Aloud? How Should SRI Be Paced and Sequenced? What if an Instructional Activity Doesn
t Work? How Will I Know if My Students are Using the Strategies? Where Will I Find Time for SRI? How Can I Juggle It All? What Does a Lesson Look Like? What
s Ahead? 6. Implementing Schoolwide Strategic Reading Instruction SRI Requires a Pervasive and Persuasive Reading Culture SRI Requires Balanced Instruction SRI Requires a Research-based Curriculum Is Your School or District Ready for SRI? Conclusion References Index