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When Kids Can't Read: What Teachers Can Do: A Guide for Teachers 6-12BUY FROM AMAZON.COM
Price: $29.30
Usually ships in 24 hours RRP: Buy New: $29.30 You Save: $0.20 (1%) Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours EDITORIAL REVIEWFor Kylene Beers, the question of what to do when kids can't read surfaced abruptly in 1979 when she began teaching. That year, she discovered that some of the students in her seventh-grade language arts classes could pronounce all the words, but couldn't make any sense of the text. PRODUCT DETAILSPublisher: HeinemannPub. Date: 28th October 2002 Catalog: Book Media: Paperback Number Of Pages: 400 Ean: 9780867095197 Isbn: 0867095199 ABOUT THIS BOOKUSER REVIEWS
This book is an excellent resource for teachers in all grade levels. The strategies can be used for elementary students and the book has helpful charts that direct you to the information you need if a student has difficulty with comprehension, vocabulary, word recognition and fluency, or spelling. One of the best resources I have ever used in 27 years of teaching.
I love this book, I attended a workshop with Kylene and her ideas were wonderful, my original burnt in a fire so i had to replace it! I think it would be a great addition to any classroom.
We secondary (Grades 7-12) English teachers have a weakness and it's called reading. Oh, we're GREAT readers and love literature and know how to teach it (to avid and average readers). But throw a kid at us who struggles with reading (and we get them every year) and they're likely to fall through the cracks, because our solutions are rather simplistic. We say things like, "Read it again," or "Sound the word out," or "Look the word up." When they hesitate before a strange word while reading aloud, we give them the word. When they don't do the reading assignment, we watch them flunk our quizzes and wonder why they are so lazy. Enter Kylene Beers, with easily the best book I've read on the subject of struggling readers who are NOT of elementary age, but of middle and high school age. Yes, elementary teachers have reading specialists to fall back on, but in secondary schools, it is often either the English teacher who must intervene or no one. For Beers, the inspiration for writing this book was the number of former students she had who were condemned to "or no one" because she simply did not know what to do. For me (and probably legions of other teachers) her story will sound chillingly familiar. Fortunately, WHEN KIDS CAN'T READ: WHAT TEACHERS CAN DO is the antidote to our problems. In this book, Beers identifies the myriad of types of students who struggle with reading, and why. She provides practical strategies on how to intervene if your students struggle with comprehension, vocabulary, spelling, and word recognition/fluency/automaticity. There's also advice on how to help kids in responding to literature, as well as how to help them find a book that will tap into their interests. Each chapter includes an introduction and thorough definition of the problem, a section called "Step Inside a Classroom" which details real-life transcripts of kids having this exact reading difficulty, and a list of various strategies you can try -- even if it means having different groups with scaffolding activities within your language arts classroom. At the end of the book are appendices that include such helpful reproducibles as bookmark templates, common roots/prefixes/and suffixes, Fry and Dolch word lists, common phonics generalizations, 175 most common syllables in the 5,000 most frequent English words, word sorts, easily confused words, common spelling rules, and booklists for every type of reader. Can you say goldmine? This is the end of the rainbow, folks. I can't recommend this book enough to my fellow 7-12 English teachers. Reach out to your weak readers. Don't condemn them to a life of mediocrity (or worse) in literacy by assuming either it's their problem or they are beyond help. It's not and they aren't. Buy this book and put it to good use. This is where theory meets the road (called "practicality"). Be not only an English teacher, but a READING teacher (in every sense of the word).
Beers book is very practical. She provides great information and strategies for both comprehension and fluency. Each strategy is explained fully followed by an example of how it has worked in a real classroom. Common questions about the strategies are then spoken about. Beers obviously has done great research because her suggestions target where I see many of our students struggling. I have shared her strategies with many thankful teachers.
DON'T KNOW HOW TO TEACH READING? BUY THIS BOOK! DON'T JUST TELL KIDS TO READ. GIVE THEM THE TOOLS TO BECOME BETTER READERS! THIS BOOK HAS ALL THAT! SO MANY S.D.A.I./ S.I.O.P. IDEAS! DON'T WASTE YOUR MONEY ON ANYTHING ELSE. THIS BOOK SHOWS YOU HOW TO USE HANDS-ON ACTIVITIES TO TEACH PREDICTING, SUMMARIZING, INFERENCE, USING CONTEXT CLUES, ETC. THIS BOOK IS A GODSEND! THANK YOU KYLENE BEERS! SIMILAR ITEMS:
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