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Designing Meaning-Based Interventions for Struggling Readers [Kietas viršelis]

(Minnesota State University, United States)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 260 pages, aukštis x plotis: 254x178 mm, weight: 696 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Apr-2021
  • Leidėjas: Guilford Press
  • ISBN-10: 1462545785
  • ISBN-13: 9781462545780
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 260 pages, aukštis x plotis: 254x178 mm, weight: 696 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Apr-2021
  • Leidėjas: Guilford Press
  • ISBN-10: 1462545785
  • ISBN-13: 9781462545780
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"This highly practical volume helps K-8 teachers implement effective reading interventions that support meaningful comprehension and engage students with interesting, age-appropriate texts. Andrew P. Johnson presents a range of strategies for addressing difficulties in the core areas of word identification, fluency, and comprehension. Packed with illustrative figures, the book provides guidance and tools for assessing reading problems, combining and adapting interventions for particular students, planning writing activities to enhance reading, aligning efforts within a response-to-intervention framework, and designing individualized education programs. Informed by current research, Johnson candidly targets "educational malpractice" and helps readers puzzle through the controversies surrounding dyslexia diagnoses and special education decision making. Subject areas/Key words: reading problems, literacy, instruction, methods, difficulties, dyslexia, response to intervention, RTI, teaching, teachers, elementary, middle grades, word study, writing, fluency, comprehension, assessments, special education, guide to reading interventions Audience: K-8 classroom teachers; special educators; reading/literacy specialists and coaches"--

This highly practical volume helps K&;8 teachers implement effective reading interventions that support meaningful comprehension and engage students with interesting, age-appropriate texts. Andrew P. Johnson presents a range of strategies for addressing difficulties in the core areas of word identification, fluency, and comprehension. Packed with illustrative figures, the book provides guidance and tools for assessing reading problems, combining and adapting interventions for particular students, planning writing activities to enhance reading, aligning efforts within a response-to-intervention framework, and designing individualized education programs. Informed by current research, Johnson candidly targets "educational malpractice&; and helps readers puzzle through the controversies surrounding dyslexia diagnoses and special education decision making.
 

Recenzijos

"Johnson's presentation of a meaning-based approach in the design of interventions for all struggling readers is well written and convincingly argued. This instructional plan is appropriate for any child experiencing difficulties acquiring reading proficiencies, including those labeled as dyslexics. Johnson's approach shares little with traditional methods for teaching struggling readers--and I hope it will initiate needed changes in remedial and special education. If only every teacher preparing to become a reading specialist or special educator could read this book before they began their student teaching apprenticeship!"--Richard L. Allington, PhD, College of Education (Emeritus), The University of Tennessee, Knoxville

"This book masterfully synthesizes the latest literacy acquisition research and provides critical pedagogical practices for targeting each students learning needs. It is an essential resource for preservice teachers, classroom teachers, reading interventionists, and special education teachers interested in capitalizing on responsive decision making. Johnson presents interventions that are cleverly designed to support accelerative progress, ensuring all students learn to read."--Mary R. Van Etten, MEd, district literacy specialist/Reading Recovery coordinator, Muskogee Public Schools, Oklahoma

"During my time as a special educator and instructional coach, I longed for a framework that operationalized a meaning-based approach to reading interventions. Johnson lays out the rationale for such an approach and follows it up with a practical process. This book is a 'must read' for every special educator and for any educator who wants a solid resource for designing reading instruction that meets the needs of today's diverse classrooms."--Staci Gilpin, MSEd, former teacher and instructional coach; doctoral student in Educational Foundations and Research, University of North Dakota

"Johnson provides a refreshing look at interventions for struggling readers and the need to focus on making meaning from text. He reinforces the idea that a majority of our students know how to read, but lack the skills necessary to make meaning. I appreciate this book's frank discussions of intervention fidelity, direct instruction, and the need to recognize the nuances each of our students bring with them. Johnson shares a concrete process for designing meaning-based interventions that I look forward to bringing to our special education licensure program!"--Amy Murzyn, EdD, School of Education and Social Work, College of St. Scholastica-

Introduction 1(10)
This Is Not Another RTI Book
1(1)
A General Overview of RTI for Reading, Writing, and Math
1(1)
Tier 1
2(1)
Tier 2
3(1)
Tier 3
4(1)
Implementing RTI Flexibly
4(1)
Organization of This Book
5(2)
New Ideas
7(4)
PART I BACKGROUND INFORMATION
1 Instruction and Interventions
11(6)
Defining Our Terms
11(1)
Daily Reading Instruction
12(2)
Effective Reading Interventions
14(1)
They Already Know How to Read
15(1)
Three Big Ideas
16(1)
2 Educational Research and Theoretical Models
17(5)
Theoretical Models
17(3)
Research and Theoretical Models
20(2)
3 Understanding the Reading Process
22(6)
How the Brain Creates Meaning with Print
22(6)
4 Coming to a Common Understanding
28(7)
Eight Essential Literacy Terms
28(1)
Methods, Strategies, and Direct Instruction
29(2)
Direct Instruction In a Meaning-Based Approach
31(4)
PART II ELEMENTS OF A MEANING-BASED INTERVENTION FOR READING
5 How a Meaning-Based Intervention for Reading Works
35(4)
Interventions and Educational Malpractice
35(2)
Intervention Sessions for Reading
37(1)
Final Word
38(1)
6 Language Experience Activities
39(4)
An Experience with Language
39(1)
Steps
39(3)
Tips
42(1)
7 Word Work
43(16)
Phonics
43(9)
How to Teach Phonics
52(2)
Games
54(4)
The Best Approach to Phonics Instruction
58(1)
8 Sight Words and Scope and Sequence Charts
59(7)
Sight Words
59(4)
Scope and Nonsense Charts
63(2)
Final Word
65(1)
9 Word Identification Strategies
66(6)
A Quick Review
66(1)
Morphemic Analysis
66(3)
Context Clues: The Semantic Cueing System
69(1)
Analogy
70(1)
Phonics
71(1)
The Big Picture
71(1)
10 Cloze and Maze Activities: Semantic Cueing
72(8)
A Quick Review
72(1)
Cloze and Maze
72(3)
Pre- and Postreading Activities
75(2)
Cloze for Small Groups
77(1)
Tips for Using Maze and Cloze Activities
78(1)
Final Word
79(1)
11 Writing for Reading
80(9)
Writing for Syntactic Cueing
80(1)
Writing Activities
80(8)
Final Word
88(1)
12 Fluency
89(13)
What It Is
89(1)
Standardized Reading Rates
89(2)
Reading with Expression and Prosody
91(1)
No Round-Robin Reading
92(3)
WPM versus WCPM: Accuracy
95(1)
Fluency Strategies
96(4)
Progress Monitoring
100(1)
Final Word
101(1)
13 Comprehension
102(15)
Understanding Comprehension
102(1)
Teach the Process to Develop the Skill
103(2)
Comprehension Skill Activities
105(11)
Three Big Ideas
116(1)
14 Reading Practice (More, Please)
117(12)
Reading Practice
117(3)
Reading Practice as Part of an Intervention
120(4)
Three Other Ideas
124(2)
Final Word
126(3)
PART III DIAGNOSING, ASSESSING, AND MONITORING PROGRESS
15 Standardized Tests
129(6)
Standardized and Norm-Referenced Tests
129(1)
An Educational Tool
130(1)
Limitations of Standardized Tests
131(2)
A Story about Validity
133(1)
Final Word
134(1)
16 Diagnosing the Problem
135(15)
Diagnostic Reading Assessment
135(2)
Miscue Analyses
137(5)
Comprehension
142(3)
Fluency
145(2)
Final Word
147(1)
Appendix: Report
147(3)
17 Progress Monitoring
150(11)
What It Is
150(1)
Word Identification
150(4)
Comprehension
154(1)
Fluency
155(1)
Student Perception/Attitude
156(1)
Final Word
157(4)
PART IV INDIVIDUALIZED EDUCATION PROGRAMS
18 Individualized Education Programs for Reading
161(13)
Individualized Education Programs
161(2)
Present Level of Performance
163(1)
Measurable Annual Goals
164(6)
Benchmarks and Assessment
170(2)
Special Education and Related Services
172(1)
Eight Tips for Designing Effective IEPs
173(1)
19 Peer-Reviewed Research
174(7)
Blind Peer Review
174(3)
Implications
177(4)
PART V DESIGNING READING INTERVENTIONS
20 Response-to-intervention Particulars
181(6)
Assessment and Intervention
181(1)
Tier 1
181(3)
Tier 2
184(1)
Tier 3
185(1)
Final Word
186(1)
21 Scientifically Based Research
187(8)
Research, Science, and Methodology
188(1)
The Gold Standard
189(4)
Instructional Practices
193(1)
Educational Wonderland
193(2)
22 When the Gold Standard Is Un-Golden: A Review of Torgesen et al. (2009)
195(13)
Un-Golden Goldenality
195(1)
The Illusion of Objectivity
195(2)
The Abstract
197(1)
The Research Questions
198(1)
Preventing Early Reading Difficulties in Students at Risk for Dyslexia
199(3)
Equivalency and Validity
202(3)
Results
205(3)
23 Evaluating Research
208(8)
Five General Points Related to Research in Education
208(2)
Evaluating Research
210(1)
Quantitative Research
211(3)
Qualitative Research
214(1)
Final Word
215(1)
24 Students with Dyslexia
216(17)
Reading Instruction for Students with Dyslexia
216(3)
Defining Dyslexia
219(3)
Seven Things We Know about Dyslexia
222(2)
Interventions for Students with Dyslexia
224(4)
Final Word
228(5)
PART VI ISSUES IN SPECIAL EDUCATION
25 Problems in the Special Education World
233(4)
The System Is Broken
233(2)
The Answer
235(2)
Epilogue 237(4)
References 241(13)
Index 254
Andrew P. Johnson, PhD, is Professor of Literacy Instruction and Distinguished Faculty Scholar at Minnesota State University, Mankato. He specializes in literacy instruction for students with intellectual and learning disabilities, response to intervention for reading and writing, strategies for the inclusive classroom, and advanced pedagogy. Prior to his university career, he taught in elementary, middle, and high school classrooms for 9 years. Dr. Johnson is the author of numerous academic articles, book chapters, and books related to literacy and learning, and hosts a podcast, The Reading Instruction Show.