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Adolescent Literacy: Turning Promise into Practice

Adolescent Literacy: Turning Promise into Practice

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Authors: Kylene Beers, Robert E. Probst, Linda Rief
Publisher: Heinemann
Category: Book

List Price: $29.50
Buy New: $18.99
You Save: $10.51 (36%)



New (25) Used (10) from $18.99

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 57122

Media: Paperback
Pages: 432
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6
Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.3 x 0.9

ISBN: 0325011281
Dewey Decimal Number: 428.00712
EAN: 9780325011288
ASIN: 0325011281

Publication Date: April 26, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
pbA study guide is available for this title. Click here to download (PDF, 117KB)./b/pThis is the time to think boldly about adolescent literacy. So much of what we know about adolescents and their learning has changed in the last decade, and since then both the world of education and the world at large have become very different places. iAdolescent Literacy /iconvenes a conversation among today's most important educational thinkers and practitioners to address crucial advances in research on adolescent learning, to assess which of our current practices meets the challenges of the twenty-first century, and to discover transformative ideas and methods that turn the promise of education into instructional practice.div /divdivIn iAdolescent Literacy/i renowned educators Kylene Beers, Bob Probst, and Linda Rief lead twenty-eight of the most important and widely read educators across the country in a conversation about where we are in the teaching of literacy to adolescents and how best to move forward. From researchers to classroom teachers, from long-treasured voices to important new members of the education community, iAdolescent Literacy /iincludes the thoughts of central figures in the field today./divdiv /divdiviAdolescent Literacy/i discusses the most provocative issues of our time, including:/divul liEnglish language learners/li listruggling readers/li litechnology in the classroom/li limultimodal literacy/li licompelling writing instruction/li liteaching in a ldquo;flat worldrdquo;/li liyoung adult literature./li/uldiv /divdivEach of its chapters builds on the previous to create a unified story of adolescent literacy that will help all middle and secondary teachers and administrators envision literacy instruction in exciting new ways. In addition iAdolescent Literacy/i'sassessmen rubrics for teachers, administrators, and staff developers make it an ideal resource for schoolwide and districtwide professional development, while its accompanying study guide is perfect for small-group discussions. /divdiv /divdivNow is indeed the time to create a powerful vision of how to teach adolescents. The research on their learning has reached a critical mass, modern technology has allowed them to engage in a far wider range of literate behaviors than ever before, and their world has become increasingly connected, increasingly competitive, and increasingly polarized. Read iAdolescent Literacy/i, consider the thoughts of leading educators, and join a conversation about what it means to teach and learn in this dynamic new environment. And do it soon, because the need to turn education's promise into classroom practice has never been more urgent./div


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Perfect for a Professional Study Group   March 3, 2008
J. Flora
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

The literacy team at my high school chose this book to read together, and it's been insightful, informative reading. After reading countless how-to books on literacy, it's been refreshing to read a relaxed collection of the nation's best literacy teachers' experiences with students and literacy. br / br /Our group has changed how we organize our study because of this book, too. Each week, we read a new chapter--the book is designed to be read at any point, and the team decides which chapter they want to read next-- and we apply a learning / discussion / writing strategy that we haven't used yet to the chapter. Last week it was table top discussion for "Flying Blind." This week it will be save the last word for me for "The Essence of Understanding," and the week after that, it we'll have a Socratic circle with Burke's "Teaching English Language Arts in a Flat World." br / br /Reading a diverse collection of practicing literacy leaders has enlivened our thinking, our work, and our study. Teachers look forward to our study team, which is amazing because it's at the end of the day, toward the end of the week. They know, however, that the book's content will invite timely discussion, writing, listening, and thinking, and using the book to show teachers literacy strategies has made my work more effective, more interesting.


5 out of 5 stars Dinner Party with the Literacy Stars   August 24, 2007
Kevin A. Freeman (MA)
15 out of 15 found this review helpful

ADOLESCENT LITERACY is rightfully compared to a dinner party attended by the brightest stars in literacy research. It is also similar to attending an NCTE Convention and meeting all those writers you love to read when it comes to books about teaching. Kylene Beers, Robert Probst, and Linda Rief (no lightweights themselves!) invited over 30 writer/researchers to contribute their latest thoughts on the conundrum of literacy in the 21st century. The result? Let's just say you'll be too satisfyingly full to bother with dessert. br / br /The book offers neat features that enhanced its reading. Their are the usual sidebars highlighting key text, but also commentary by the editors, who lead you to other chapters where other writers tackle similar topics. Thus, if you have a key interest, you will be able to jump about the book with ease and compare the different takes offered by various writers. I also liked how each chapter provided a list of books written by the chapter's author; if you really liked a particular chapter, you could therefor seek out more complete information in the form of a book. Web sites are also provided in this text, and most of them are from established (and, for teachers, practical) sites. We all the know the dangers in publishing web site addresses -- they go dead in no time. br / br /This is not just theory you'll be reading -- there are lots of practical ideas as well. Probst's chapter gives ideas on how to encourage meaningful discussion, and even grade it. Janet Allen shows you how to teach vocabulary effectively. Tom Romano gives tips on joining your students in the writing process. And Harvey Daniels writes a hilarious chapter on the brutal lessons learned from taking home 100 journals to respond to (sounded good in theory until the journals held his weekend hostage!). The whole gamut is covered -- working with emerging technologies, using the power of inquiry through key questions (provided), helping underachieving students, learning from assessment so your teaching can change and improve based on the data, etc. The dessert (I was only kidding -- I couldn't resist) comes in the form of an afterword by Nancie Atwell. br / br /Overall, it's like a "Greatest Hits" book. Instead of buying 30 separate books that would take weeks and weeks to read, you get a chapter each from what these stars in the field of reading and writing literacy feel is MOST important for you to know. Add it to your "must have" list, read it, then share it with fellow teachers, English department heads, and your principal. As the book reminds us: "The times, they are a-changin'," and if you don't change with them, you'll be left in the proverbial dust.


5 out of 5 stars Fantastic Reading   July 30, 2007
CW (Ottawa, Canada)
9 out of 9 found this review helpful

This book did not disappoint. Packed filled with engaging, persuasive and challenging arguments and current issues. Great to read over thirty literacy leaders share their views and philosophies. I could not put it down once I started reading. Essential for all reading teachers and reading coaches.