Official Portraits and Unofficial Counterportraits of At Risk" Students"

Official Portraits and Unofficial Counterportraits of At Risk
Title Official Portraits and Unofficial Counterportraits of At Risk" Students" PDF eBook
Author Richard J. Meyer
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 310
Release 2010-01-15
Genre Education
ISBN 1135240051

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This book chronicles fifth and sixth grade writers in a poor, culturally diverse, rural school in the southwest US coming into their voices, cultivating those voices, and using those voices in a variety of venues, beginning with the classroom community and spreading outward. The big ideas of official and unofficial portraits are presented, followed by data and facets of the theoretical construct of counterportraits in each chapter, as a response to official portraits.

Reclaiming Literacies as Meaning Making

Reclaiming Literacies as Meaning Making
Title Reclaiming Literacies as Meaning Making PDF eBook
Author Kathryn F. Whitmore
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 290
Release 2020-05-08
Genre Education
ISBN 0429634145

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Whitmore and Meyer bring together top literacy scholars from around the world to introduce the concept of manifestations: evidence of meaning making in literacy events, practices, processes, products, and thinking. Manifestation are windows into literacy identities, and serve as affective and sociocultural signifiers of learners’ understanding at a point in time and in a specific context. The volume reclaims progressive spaces for understanding reading, writing, drawing, speaking, playing, and other literacies. It grounds manifestations of literacies in the discourse of meaning making and demonstrates how literacy learners and educators are active agents in this complex, social, political, emotional, and multimodal process. Ideal for preservice teachers, graduate students, and researchers in literacy education, this book shifts the conversation away from treating literacies as acquired commodities and illustrates how educators engage with learners to deepen understanding of literacy learners’ experiences. Organized by five pillars of literacy—teaching, learning, language, curriculum, and sociocultural contexts—each section covers critical and cutting-edge topics and offers examples, tools, and strategies for research and practical applications in diverse classroom settings. Each chapter includes a range of examples and is followed by a short, complementary reading extension to engage the reader.

Children and Biography

Children and Biography
Title Children and Biography PDF eBook
Author Kate Douglas
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages 227
Release 2022-08-25
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1350236381

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The first study of life narratives produced for, about, and written by children, this book examines the recent popularity of children's biographies and how they engage with the biggest issues of our time: environmental change, health crises, education, and children's personal and political development. Beginning with a literary-historical overview, Children and Biography proceeds to examine 21st-century examples and trends such as illustrated texts including Women in Science, the Fantastically Great Women Who... books, Rebel Dogs, Goodnight Stories for Rebel Girls, Kids Who Did, My Beautiful Birds and The Journey. The book also considers archives of children's writings and drawings, in particular the testimonies of child asylum seekers, children's biographical art, and 'Lockdown diaries' produced during the Covid-19 pandemic. By analyzing these works alongside empirical studies into how such material is received by child readers, and how texts generated by children are perceived both by them and their parents, this book provides new knowledge on how biographies for children are produced and read. Comprehensive and original, Children and Biography, presents an ethical methodological framework for scholarly practice when reading, witnessing and interpreting children's life narratives. The book offers a mandate for future researchers: to place children's voices and writing at the centre of inquiries in ways that facilitate genuine agency for child authors.

Luminous Literacies

Luminous Literacies
Title Luminous Literacies PDF eBook
Author Mary Frances Rice
Publisher Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages 361
Release 2021-09-06
Genre Education
ISBN 1800434545

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Luminous Literacies shares examples of teachers and educators using local knowledge to illustrate literacy engagement and curriculum-making through scholarly accounts of experiences in teacher preparation courses, classrooms, and other community spaces in New Mexico.

Expanding Elementary Teacher Education through Service-Learning

Expanding Elementary Teacher Education through Service-Learning
Title Expanding Elementary Teacher Education through Service-Learning PDF eBook
Author Margaret-Mary Sulentic Dowell
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages 128
Release 2016-11-16
Genre Education
ISBN 1475825897

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Teacher education programs and colleges of education face a multilayered task of preparing teachers to teach in increasingly divergent environments where children of color encompass a significant number of urban school populations. Yet the teaching force remains predominantly white, middle-income, monolingual, and female. Compounding this complex issue, the racial and the socio-economic makeup of many teacher education faculty mirrors the teacher candidate population. The goal of this handbook is to offer teacher educators a blue print for strengthening and extending traditional literacy field experiences to include service-learning components. As literacy teacher educators, Sulentic Dowell and Meidl demonstrate how teacher education can be transformed to include more authentic, meaningful, and preparatory field experiences. Adding service-learning components expands teacher education to more adequately prepare elementary education candidates to meet children’s needs in 21st century, urban elementary classrooms. This handbook considers the need to redefine and reconfigure teacher education in regards to literacy teaching and learning.

Reclaiming Reading

Reclaiming Reading
Title Reclaiming Reading PDF eBook
Author Richard J. Meyer
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 321
Release 2012-03-22
Genre Education
ISBN 1136837914

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This book examines how the teaching of reading can be reclaimed from government mandates, scripted commercial programs, and high stakes tests via intensive reconsideration of learning, teaching, curriculum, language, and sociocultural contexts.

Literacy Policies and Practices in Conflict

Literacy Policies and Practices in Conflict
Title Literacy Policies and Practices in Conflict PDF eBook
Author Nancy Rankie Shelton
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 164
Release 2014-12-05
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 113631217X

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Current U.S. school reform efforts link school success, student achievement, and teacher performance to standardized tests and narrowly prescribed curricula. How do test-driven, mandated curricula in urban school systems overtly and subtly impact teachers’ efforts to provide technologically advanced, challenging classroom environments that foster literacy development for all students? How do these federal policies affect instruction at the classroom level? The premise of this book is that, in order for teachers to confront and/or counteract the pressures placed on them from these policies, it is necessary to first understand them. This book takes a close look at the tensions that exist between federal mandates and contemporary literacy needs and how those tensions impact classroom practices. Providing a clear sociopolitical overview and analysis, it combines theoretical explanations with examples from current ethnographic research. Readers are challenged to (re)consider whether meeting test performance benchmarks should be the hallmark of school success when the goal of test performance supersedes the goal of producing highly literate, productive citizens of the future.