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Teaching Critical Reading Skills Volume 1: Strategies for Academic Librarians [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x178x15 mm, weight: 272 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Mar-2023
  • Leidėjas: Association of College & Research Libraries
  • ISBN-10: 0838939279
  • ISBN-13: 9780838939277
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x178x15 mm, weight: 272 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Mar-2023
  • Leidėjas: Association of College & Research Libraries
  • ISBN-10: 0838939279
  • ISBN-13: 9780838939277
Teaching Critical Reading Skills: Strategies for Academic Librarians collects the experiences and approaches of librarians who teach reading. In two volumes, librarians share their role in teaching reading—using pedagogical theories and techniques in new and interesting ways, making implicit reading knowledge, skills, and techniques explicit to students, presenting reading as a communal activity, partnering with other campus stakeholders, and leading campus conversations about critical reading. These volumes provide ready-made activities you can add or adapt to your teaching practice. The five sections are arranged by theme:
 
Volume 1
  • Part I: Reading in the Disciplines
  • Part II: Reading for Specific Populations
 
Volume 2
  • Part III: Reading Beyond Scholarly Texts
  • Part IV: Reading to Evaluate
  • Part V: Reading in the World 
Each of the 45 chapters contains teaching and programmatic strategies, resources, and lesson plans, as well as a section titled “Critical Reading Connection” that highlights each author’s approach for engaging with the purpose of reading critically and advancing the conversation about how librarians can foster this skill.
 
Academic librarians and archivists have a long history of engaging with different types of literacy and acting as a bridge between faculty and students. We understand the different reading needs of specific student populations and the affective challenges with reading that are often shared across learner audiences. We know what types of sources are read, the histories—and needed changes—of how authority has been granted in various fields, how students may be expected to apply what they read in future professional or civic settings, and frequently look beyond our local institutions to think about the larger structural and social justice implications of what is read, how we read, and who does the reading.
 
These volumes can help you make the implicit explicit for learners and teach that reading is both a skill that must be practiced and nurtured and a communal act. Teaching Critical Reading Skills demonstrates librarians’ and archivists’ deep connections to our campus communities and how critical reading instruction can be integrated in a variety of contexts within those communities.
Volume 1
 
Introduction
Volume 1 Reading in the Disciplines and Reading for Specific Populations
Hannah Gascho Rempel and Rachel Hamelers
 
Section I. Reading in the Disciplines
Chapter 1
Meeting Students in the Middle: Using Social Media Platforms and
Contemporary Music Genres to Teach Critical Reading Skills for Primary
Sources
Heather F. Ball
 
Chapter 2
Distant Reading as Library Pedagogy: Lessons for the Literary Studies
Classroom
Amy Barlow
 
Chapter 3
Teaching a Reading Method for Scientific Research Articles: Transforming an
Exercise from In-Person to Virtual Instruction
Roxanne Bogucka
 
Chapter 4
Medieval Medical School: A Primary Source Critical Reading Activity
Anna Dysert and Mary Hague-Yearl
 
Chapter 5
Teaching Students to Read and Critically Evaluate Scholarly Articles in
Science and Agriculture
Chrissy Hursh
 
Chapter 6
Reading Scholarly Literature Across Academic Contexts: Tailoring Genre
Approaches to Students Academic Year and Discipline
Chana Kraus-Friedberg and Emilia Marcyk
 
Chapter 7
Framing Reading as a Method in the Humanities
Elliott Kuecker
 
Chapter 8
Reading to Learn: A Collaborative Assignment to Build Critical Reading
Skills in a First-Year Engineering Course
Jennifer Luarca and Hema Ramachandran
 
Chapter 9
Re-reading and Reflection: Steppingstones for Critical Readers in a College
English Classroom
Amy Mallory-Kani and Hillary A. H. Richardson
 
Chapter 10
Reading Critically from the Archives: James Merrill Linns Diary as a
Gateway to the Past
Courtney Paddick and Carrie Pirmann
 
Chapter 11
Using Professional Expectations to Improve Research and Reading Behaviors
with Pre-Professional Health Students
Carolyn Schubert and Jennifer Walsh
 
Chapter 12
Navigating an Infodemic: Methods for Teaching Critical Reading in the Health
Sciences
Candace Vance
 
Chapter 13
Critical Reading across the Engineering Disciplines
Dr. Kari D. Weaver, Dr. Kate Mercer, and Dr. Jennifer Howcroft
 
Section II. Reading for Specific Populations
Chapter 14
Supporting Early Undergraduate Students: Using Video to Introduce Critical
Reading Skills in Scaffolded Information Literacy Instruction
Sarah Clark and Katherine J. Penner
 
Chapter 15
Critical Media Literacy Skills for Transfer Students
Margaret Dawson
 
Chapter 16
Librarians Sitting Down with Students: Varied Approaches to Co-Teaching
Reading Skills for Developmental Writers
Lauren deLaubell, Dan Harms, Jenifer Sigafoes Phelan, and Hilary Wong
 
Chapter 17
Understanding Scholarly Articles: Teaching a Strategic Reading Method to
Academically At-Risk Students
Kimberly T. Foster and Amy F. Fyn
 
Chapter 18
Surfacing Assumptions in Source Selection: Situating Critical Reading in
First-Year Information Literacy Instruction
Anne Jumonville Graf
 
Chapter 19
Information Literacy Project in a First-Year Community College Reading
Course: A Term-Long Journey
Pam Kessinger and Theresa Love
 
Chapter 20
Flexible, Not Flawless: Teaching Critical Reading Skills through a Bridge
Program
Kayla M. Gourlay, Maoria J. Kirker, and Richard Todd Stafford
 
Chapter 21
Pulling It All Together: Teaching Genre, Disciplinary and Career Literacies,
and the Framework for Information Literacy in an Associate Degree Capstone
Course
Linda Miles and Lisa Tappeiner
 
Chapter 22
Reading Scholarly Articles and the First-Year Student: In-person and Online
Instructional Strategies
Jo Angela Oehrli, Amanda Peters, and Alexander Deeke
 
Chapter 23
Connecting Critical Reading to the Literature Review: Teaching Qualitative
Data Analysis Tools to Graduate Students
Lorelei Rutledge and Donna Harp Ziegenfuss
 
Chapter 24
A Librarians Role In Academic Reading Strategies for ESOL Students
Kathy Leezin Wu and G. Paige Sloan
Volume 2
 
Introduction
Volume 2 Reading to Evaluate, Reading Beyond Scholarly Texts, and Reading
in the World
Hannah Gascho Rempel and Rachel Hamelers
 
Section III. Reading to Evaluate
Chapter 25
Diving Below the Surface: A Layered Approach to Teaching Online Source
Evaluation through Lateral and Critical Reading
Andrea Baer and Daniel G. Kipnis
 
Chapter 26
Critical Distance Reading: A Feminist Data Literacy Framework for
Decolonizing Historical Memory
Frederick C. Carey and Nickoal Eichmann-Kalwara
 
Chapter 27
Developing Critical Reading Skills in Computing Disciplines Through a Social
Justice Lens
Carmen Cole
 
Chapter 28
Textual Topographies: Equipping Students with Tools for Navigating Academic
Writing
Stephanie Geller
 
Chapter 29
The PACT Instructional Model: Using Peritextual Analysis to Improve Reading
Comprehension and Facilitate Critical Thinking
Melissa Gross, Don Latham, and Shelbie Witte
 
Chapter 30
Mapping Unfamiliar Territory: Using Guided Reading Charts to Navigate
Sources
Jennifer Jarson
 
Chapter 31
Making Critical Reading Routine: Teaching Metacognitive Information
Evaluation Using the Reading Apprenticeship Framework
Ryne Leuzinger and Jacqui Grallo
section iv. Reading beyond scholarly texts
 
Chapter 32
Defining Standards: How to Read and Teach Technical Standards
Jean L. Bossart
 
Chapter 33
More Than Meets the Eye: A Template for Workshops and Instructional Sessions
to Enhance the Ability to Critically Read Images
Jodi Brown & Kaiya Ansorge
 
Chapter 34
Critically Reading Data: Interpreting Public Opinion Polls in the News
Halle Burns
 
Chapter 35
Critical Reading and Graphic Novels: Thinking Outside the Classroom
Sara C. Kern
 
Chapter 36
Reading Memes: Rhetorical Analysis of Memes as Multimodal Texts
Jenny Dale and Maggie Murphy
 
Chapter 37
Reading the Psychology Pre-Source: Scope Notes, Citations, Help Sheets, and
More
Sala Rhodes Shierling and Dr. Rebecca Eaker
 
Chapter 38
Reading Images with a Critical Eye: Teaching Strategies for Academic
Librarians
Dana Statton Thompson and Stephanie Beene
section v. reading in the world
 
Chapter 39
Promoting Critical Reading through Learner-Centered Design:
WI+REs Approach to Open Online Learning
Salma Abumeeiz, Christopher Lopez, Matthew Weirick Johnson, Kian Ravaei,
Renee Romero, Hannah Sutherland, and Doug Worsham
 
Chapter 40
Creating a Skeptical Mindset: Helping Students Evaluate Statistical Claims
in Popular Sources
Joshua Becker
 
Chapter 41
Complex Texts: Critically Reading Race and Representation in Picture Books
Jewel Davis
 
Chapter 42
Co-CREATE Your Class: Critical Reading Instruction for First-Year Students
Caitlan Maxwell and abby koehler
 
Chapter 43
Taking Back Reading: Lateral Reading and Fake News with First Generation
College Students of Color
Jennifer Masunaga and Paizha Stoothoff
 
Chapter 44
Value in Disruption: A Reading is Research Pedagogy for Library
Instruction
Catherine Tingelstad and Stephanie Otis
 
Chapter 45
According to Science: Critically Examining Media Reports of Primary
Research
Kaitlin Springmier, Caitlin Plovnick, and Hilary Smith
 
About the Editors