1st Edition

Teaching Reading Effective Schools, Accomplished Teachers

Edited By Barbara M. Taylor, P. David Pearson Copyright 2002
    420 Pages
    by Routledge

    420 Pages
    by Routledge

    This unique book tells the story of a select group of schools and teachers who have managed to beat the odds in terms of improving elementary students reading achievement. Originating with the CIERA School Change Project directed by Barbara Taylor and David Pearson, it was subsequently expanded to include the work of other research teams doing similar work. It combines large scale studies of effective schools and teachers (Part I) with case studies of individual schools and teachers who have successfully transformed research findings into situation-specific strategies appropriate to their schools and classrooms (Parts II and III). The book's distinct contribution is showing that no matter how consistent the research findings on effective school and classroom practice, groups of teachers must improvise their own situation-specific programs and practices. In short, they must be able to create variations on a common theme. Key features of this outstanding new volume include:

    *Integration of research and cases--One cannot fully understand research-based general principles without knowing how they play themselves out in specific settings. Similarly, one cannot fully understand cases without seeing the commonalities across different schools and classrooms sharing similar goals. This book provides both perspectives.

    *Diverse cases--The schools and classrooms depicted in this book are urban, rural, and suburban; poor and middle class; and English-only and bilingual. Rather than telling readers how to beat the odds, it provides them with a wide variety of cases from which they can extrapolate to build their own customized teaching programs and practices.

    *Summarizing section--The final section contains a summary of research on effective schools and teachers and a concluding chapter by Gerry Duffy and Jim Hoffman in which they reflect on the book's content and possible directions for future research.

    The book is targeted to both in-service elementary teachers and literacy students in advanced college courses.

    Contents: Part I:Large Scale Studies. B.M. Taylor, P.D. Pearson, K. Clark, S. Walpole, Effective Schools/Accomplished Teachers: Lessons About Primary Reading Instruction in Low-Income Schools. M. Pressley, R.W. McDonald, L.M. Raphael, K. Bogner, A. Roehrig, Exemplary First-Grade Teaching. J.E. Johnson, Jr., High-Performing, High-Poverty Urban Elementary Schools. J. Mosenthal, M. Lipson, S. Sortino, B. Russ, J. Mekkelsen, Literacy in Rural Vermont: Lessons From Schools Where Children Succeed. S. Paris, A. Paris, R. Carpenter, Effective Practices for Assessing Young Readers. Part II:School Case Studies. B.M. Taylor, C. Critchley, Sunnyside Elementary, Mounds View, MN. J. Colt, R. Mills, Rocky Mountain Elementary School, Longmont, CO. S. Walpole, Stevenson Elementary School: Schoolwide Success. J. Danridge, P.D. Pearson, Scott Elementary School: Home Grown School Improvement in the Flesh--Glenda Breaux. M. Adler, Serna Elementary School. P. Smith, J.E. Johnson, Jr., B. Jones, In Pursuit of Academic Excellence: The Story of Gladys Noon Spellman Elementary. Part III:Teacher Case Studies. B.M. Taylor, Highly Accomplished Primary Grade Teachers in Effective Schools. L.M. Morrow, A Case Study of Exemplary Practice in Fourth Grade. C.S. Englert, K. Dunsmore, Scientific Literacy and Diverse Learners: Supporting the Acquisition of Disciplinary Ways of Knowing in Inclusion Classrooms. R. Barrera, R. Jiménez, Bilingual Teachers Speak About the Literacy Instruction of Bilingual Latino Students. Part IV:Syntheses Across Cases. B.M. Taylor, M. Pressley, P.D. Pearson, Increasing Reading Achievement: Research-Supported Characteristics of Teachers and Schools. G. Duffy, J. Hoffman, Beating the Odds in Literacy Education: No the "Betting on" but the "Bettering of" Schools and Teachers.

    Biography

    Barbara M. Taylor, P. David Pearson

    "...raises issues that researchers in early literacy need to foreground and explore further....provides ample evidence that effective schools do share certain characteristics in the way they organize instruction and support teachers, and it is a useful contribution to the discussion about how we can establish a context for teaching reading....This book provides good evidence that institutional and school organizational factors are an important part of providing effective instruction in reading....Teaching Reading is a key issue for today's schools. The contexts for effectiveness presented in this volume are a first step..."
    American Journal of Psychology