Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Good writing begins with good reading. This book is written on the premise that students must embrace reading as a part of the full process of good writing. It may be used by classroom teachers (Grades 6-12) individually or collectively as members of a professional learning community, by pre-service teachers in a literacy course, or by other educators working to support literacy in the classroom. Interdisciplinary discussions relate to all types or genres of reading and writing. This book offers practical lessons and ideas for teaching and motivating all learners using Universal Design for…mehr
Good writing begins with good reading. This book is written on the premise that students must embrace reading as a part of the full process of good writing. It may be used by classroom teachers (Grades 6-12) individually or collectively as members of a professional learning community, by pre-service teachers in a literacy course, or by other educators working to support literacy in the classroom. Interdisciplinary discussions relate to all types or genres of reading and writing. This book offers practical lessons and ideas for teaching and motivating all learners using Universal Design for Learning principles. Formatting provides additional ideas for challenged students, including students with special needs, accelerated learners, and English Language Learners, and is aligned with Common Core State Standards for content subjects as well as for language arts. It takes ideas that were formerly reserved for the upper echelon of students in English language arts and reformulates teaching approaches to reach students across the learning spectrum and in all disciplines. All teachers need to be involved in raising the literacy bar, and this book provides activities and strategies for use in the classroom that can promote success for all learners.
Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Autorenporträt
Nancy Charron attended the University of Michigan and received a Bachelor of Science degree in elementary education and deaf education. She received a Master of Education degree in teaching reading from Western Michigan University and a doctorate degree in language arts and literacy from the University of Massachusetts. She has worked as a general education teacher, a special education teacher, a reading specialist, and a principal designee. She is currently teaching graduate education courses for Southern New Hampshire University.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Introduction Chapter 1: Reading to Improve Student Writing Activity 1.1: Take Time to Notice-Looking and Learning Activity 1.2: Take Time to Notice-An Artist's Choices Activity 1.3: Take Time to Notice-Comparison of Two Works of Art Activity 1.4: Noticing the Writer's Choices-Reading Poems Activity 1.5: Noticing the Writer's Choices-Reading Fiction Activity 1.6: Noticing the Writer's Choices-Reading Nonfiction Activity 1.7: Determining Connotation vs. Denotation-Taking the Temperature of Words Activity 1.8: Identifying Three Kinds of Questions Activity 1.9: Using the I-Search Paper Chapter 2: Reading and Writing in the Content Areas Activity 2.1: Using the SOAPSTone Strategy Activity 2.2: Role-playing Activity 2.3: Using Primary Documents Activity 2.4: Using Letters, Diaries, and Other Primary Sources Activity 2.5: Applying the Concept of Essential Questions in Content Areas Activity 2.6: Implementing Socratic Seminars Activity 2.7: Reviewing the Textbook Activity 2.8: Journaling Activity 2.9: Authentic Content Area Writing Chapter 3: Developing Focus and Logic through the Essay Activity 3.1: How Meaning is Constructed in E.B. White's "Once More to the Lake" Activity 3.2: Form Supports Meaning Activity 3.3: Conversion of a Narrative to an Essay Activity 3.4: Finding Significance in Literature Activity 3.5: Brainstorming in Response to Essential Questions Chapter 4: Reading for Persuasive Writing: The Argument Activity 4.1: Checklist for Close-Reading Activity 4.2: The Face-Off Activity 4.3: The Scaffolded Oral Presentation Activity 4.4: A Panel Discussion Activity 4.5: Staging the Trial Activity 4.6: Defending Preference Chapter 5: Learning to Write by Reading Poetry Activity 5.1: Less is More Activity 5.2: "Found" Poetry Activity 5.3: From Prose to Poetry Activity 5.4: Playing with Meter Activity 5.5: Learning from e.e. cummings Activity 5.6: Poems Using Metaphor Activity 5.7: Letter Poem Activity 5.8: History and Poetry Activity 5.9: Songs as Poetry Activity 5:10: Inference Chapter 6: Providing Literacy Access to All Students Chapter 7: Reading and Reflecting on One's Own Writing Chapter 8: Closing the Literacy Loop References About the Authors
Preface Introduction Chapter 1: Reading to Improve Student Writing Activity 1.1: Take Time to Notice-Looking and Learning Activity 1.2: Take Time to Notice-An Artist's Choices Activity 1.3: Take Time to Notice-Comparison of Two Works of Art Activity 1.4: Noticing the Writer's Choices-Reading Poems Activity 1.5: Noticing the Writer's Choices-Reading Fiction Activity 1.6: Noticing the Writer's Choices-Reading Nonfiction Activity 1.7: Determining Connotation vs. Denotation-Taking the Temperature of Words Activity 1.8: Identifying Three Kinds of Questions Activity 1.9: Using the I-Search Paper Chapter 2: Reading and Writing in the Content Areas Activity 2.1: Using the SOAPSTone Strategy Activity 2.2: Role-playing Activity 2.3: Using Primary Documents Activity 2.4: Using Letters, Diaries, and Other Primary Sources Activity 2.5: Applying the Concept of Essential Questions in Content Areas Activity 2.6: Implementing Socratic Seminars Activity 2.7: Reviewing the Textbook Activity 2.8: Journaling Activity 2.9: Authentic Content Area Writing Chapter 3: Developing Focus and Logic through the Essay Activity 3.1: How Meaning is Constructed in E.B. White's "Once More to the Lake" Activity 3.2: Form Supports Meaning Activity 3.3: Conversion of a Narrative to an Essay Activity 3.4: Finding Significance in Literature Activity 3.5: Brainstorming in Response to Essential Questions Chapter 4: Reading for Persuasive Writing: The Argument Activity 4.1: Checklist for Close-Reading Activity 4.2: The Face-Off Activity 4.3: The Scaffolded Oral Presentation Activity 4.4: A Panel Discussion Activity 4.5: Staging the Trial Activity 4.6: Defending Preference Chapter 5: Learning to Write by Reading Poetry Activity 5.1: Less is More Activity 5.2: "Found" Poetry Activity 5.3: From Prose to Poetry Activity 5.4: Playing with Meter Activity 5.5: Learning from e.e. cummings Activity 5.6: Poems Using Metaphor Activity 5.7: Letter Poem Activity 5.8: History and Poetry Activity 5.9: Songs as Poetry Activity 5:10: Inference Chapter 6: Providing Literacy Access to All Students Chapter 7: Reading and Reflecting on One's Own Writing Chapter 8: Closing the Literacy Loop References About the Authors
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826