50 Literacy Strategies: Step-by-Step (Books by Gail Tompkins)
R**R
Learning to Write from our Best Writers
“Developing inquire skills is not an educational mission we need to work hard to sell. …[All schools] want their students to acquire the skills that will equip them to become independent learners, able to seek answers to their own questions.” So says Columbia University’s Teachers College Professor, Deanna Kuhn, in her book, Education For Thinking (Harvard University Press, 2005, p. 39.) The beauty of this idea is not missed on David Harrison, the well-known children’s writer whose writing spans topics from cave exploration to nest-building, from mountains to mammoth bones. The amount of research he has had to do for his, now, 100 published books is staggering. But how does he do it? What skills has he had to develop? Good questions!Together, with the literacy specialist, Mary Jo Fresh, the two have written a book that teachers will treasure. 7 Keys to Research for Writing Success (Scholastic, 2018) gives advice, from the inside out, fortunately answering our questions: How does David think about choosing a topic? How does he pose questions? How does he do pre-research (new idea, yes?), figure out key, and central, ideas and words, conduct in-depth research, take effective notes, and organize what he’s discovered? What a gift! Here’s just a small excerpt of David taking to kids about his preresearch for Now You see Them, Now You Don’t (Charlesbridge, 2016).Now You See Them, Now You Don’t (2016) is a book of poems I write about animals that use their natural camouflage to hunt for food or hide from those that want to eat them. During my preresearch I paid special attention to finding all the creatures that had those qualities so I would have plenty to choose from when it came time to start writing.As a long time 3rd grade teacher I can tell you, first hand, that this is the sort of work that changes everything. Suddenly writing a research piece isn’t scary—at all. It’s just plain fun. I think part of the magic is related to what David and Mary Jo suggest toward the end of their book, “Research Notes Speak Many Languages.” The students learn that perhaps their work might take the shape of an information book? Perhaps a story? Perhaps a poem? Perhaps an ABC book? Perhaps a blog post? Wow.As I think about all the skills that David and Mary Jo help students develop through their 7 Keys text, I’m reminded of the seminal work of Marie Ponsot and Rosemary Deen, who came to define five elemental writing skills that worked to change my own classroom into a dynamic learning space. Like David, my students worked from the inside out as they practiced the Ponsot/Deen skills—writing a whole lot (prolific writing), writing from the sense of a whole structure, making observations about writing, writing both concretely and abstractly, and rewriting (not as remedial practice but for discovery). I see that the steps David and Mary Jo suggest are flooded with these elemental skills, skills that turn children into fine writers, readers, thinkers, and explorers.What a treat of a book! And, while I wish David and Mary Jo great success, the real winners will be the children who have the chance to use what their teachers learn, and then offer them.
M**T
Required reading
This book is great - full of strategies for teaching reading and writing.
G**N
Great Tool for Teachers of Literacy in the Elementary Classroom.
This is an excellent text for elementary teacher of Literacy. Strategies are explained clearly and simple enough for novice teachers. Examples are provided which provides additional support. I have also tailored the strategy for use with secondary students as well. Strategies are student centered and reflect best practices in the subject area.A plus for me is the step-by-step approach provided that makes for a quick read. Readers are provided with a rationale for each strategy and When to use! Strategies are also presented in alphabetical order-allows for quick search. A must have. This is my third purchase! Teachers would find it useful for the content areas as well.
H**.
Great textbook with useful strategies.
I already thought I had learned all of the prominent literacy strategy, but I was pleasantly surprised that this book had more to teach me. I adopted many of the strategies as my own.
A**N
Easy to Navigate and great strategies
Absolutely LOVE the way this book is set up. Great basic for any classroom. The strategies are broken down by age group and instructional focus. I usually rent my books every semester, but because of the low cost I bought this one and I am very happy I did!
C**M
Great for all reading teachers!
As a Reading Specialist, I was looking for an easy "on the go" book to help with reading strategies for fluency, comprehension and phonemic awareness. I really like this book. It is easy to read and implement the names strategies!
B**T
Thanks
Thanks
E**P
Excellent!
Excellent title recommended by my Teacher! It's giving e the tools to learn how to help children to write and read effectively.
S**R
Not impressed
I found this book to have nothing new to offer. It was all things that teachers are doing already with minimal instruction for the lessons - guided reading, KWL, good fit book, book talk. I would not spend your hard earned money.
B**E
Five Stars
good
K**A
Five Stars
Excellent Ideas
A**L
perfect for the teacher/ student on the go
Arrived a day earlier than expected, and arrived in mint condition. It was protected in bubble wrap, and had no cuts or marks. Very well written and helpful product, perfect for the teacher/ student on the go.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 day ago