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El. knyga: Why Do I Have to Read This?: Literacy Strategies to Engage Our Most Reluctant Students

4.31/5 (174 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: 230 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Oct-2023
  • Leidėjas: Stenhouse Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781003840060
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 230 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Oct-2023
  • Leidėjas: Stenhouse Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781003840060
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&;Why do I have to read this &;

What teacher doesn&;t dread this question? It usually comes from our most disengaged students like the class clown or the student who struggles to read and write at grade-level. Sometimes we hear it from a student who cries of boredom or one who is angry or apathetic. When we don&;t know what else to try, it&;s easy to become frustrated and give up on these challenging learners. But take heart! Author Cris Tovani has spent her career figuring out how to entice challenging students back into the process of learning.

In Why Do I Have to Read This? Cris Tovani shares her best secrets, lessons learned from big fails, and her most effective literacy and planning strategies that hook these hard to get learners. 

You will meet many of Cris&;s students inside this book. As she describes some of her favorites, you may even recognize a few of your own. You will laugh at her stories and take comfort in her easily adaptable strategies that help students remove their masks of disengagement. Cris shows teachers how to plan by anticipating students&; needs. Her Curriculum You Anticipate structures of Topic, Task, Targets, Text, Tend to me, and Time will literally help you anticipate your curriculum. 

Inside Why Do I Have to Read This? readers will find:

  • literacy strategies for all content areas that support and engage a wide range of learners so they can read and write a variety of complex text 
  • reference charts packed with small bites of instructional shifts that coaches and teachers can use to quickly adjust instruction to re-engage students 
  • planning strategies that show teachers how to connect day-to-day instruction so that no day lives in isolation 
  • versatile thinksheets that are reproducible and adaptable to different grade levels, content areas, and disciplines

Above all, Cris gives teachers energy to get back into the classroom and face students who wear masks of disengagement. She reminds us of the importance of connecting students to compelling topics, rich text, useful targets, and worthy tasks. She reminds us of the importance of tending to students&; basic needs and helps us consider how to best structure instructional time. After reading this book, teachers will have new ways to connect with students in a deep, authentic way. Written in a humorous, compassionate, and wise voice, Why Do I Have to Read This? will provide answers to the pressing questions we have when we try to teach and reach all of our students.

Acknowledgments x
Chapter 1 I Hate School and I'm Not Wild About You Either
1(14)
These Kids Don't Care
2(1)
The Masks Kids Wear
2(1)
The Mask of the Class Clown
3(1)
The Mask of Minimal Effort
4(2)
The Mask of Invisibility
6(2)
When Am I Fully Engaged?
8(1)
Circles of Engagement: Behavioral, Emotional, and Cognitive
9(2)
What Comes First?
11(1)
Back to Our Big Questions
11(4)
Chapter 2 Wedgies, Drunken Bears, and the Stress of Shortsighted Planning
15(32)
Trust Them to Think
17(5)
Our Big Questions
22(5)
Planning Ahead to Keep from Getting Behind
27(1)
Winging Workshop
28(1)
Thinking About the Long and Short of It: Long-Term Planning that Guides the Day-to-Day Work
29(2)
Curriculum Is More Than the "Stuff" We Teach
31(2)
CYA Structures: Harnessing the Power of the Six Ts: Topic, Tasks, Targets, Text, Tend to Me, and Time
33(5)
The Six Ts Organized by Small Bites: Topic, Tasks, Targets, Text, Tend to Me, and Time
38(3)
Long-Term Planning Components that Remove the Masks
41(6)
Chapter 3 The Masks of Anger and Apathy
47(30)
The Mask of Anger
47(1)
The Mask of Apathy
48(4)
Teacher as Chief Connector
52(9)
Connecting Kids to Content
61(6)
Connecting Students to Each Other
67(3)
Connections to Text
70(1)
What Works Best to Connect Kids to Text?
71(2)
Where Do I Find Text That Kids Will Read?
73(1)
Connections Affect Anger and Apathy
74(2)
What Works? Five CYA Strategies That Help Students Take Off the Masks of Anger and Apathy
76(1)
Chapter 4 The Mask of the Class Clown
77(30)
Why Text Matters
79(3)
Tending to Text Selection
82(5)
Tending to Topics
87(1)
Who Cares About the Rock Cycle?
88(1)
Rodderick and the Rocks
89(3)
Fifty-Two Stories High
92(3)
What Makes a Topic Compelling?
95(1)
I Don't Want to Get Political
96(2)
Why Controversy Matters
98(1)
The View from the Street
99(7)
What Works? Five CYA Strategies That Help Students Put Away Their Class Clown Mask
106(1)
Chapter 5 The Mask of Minimal Effort
107(24)
If Only I Could Read My Teacher's Mind
110(3)
Showing What Success Looks Like by Analyzing a Model
113(2)
Authentic Artifacts and Mentors: Meet the Guest Teacher
115(4)
Working Smarter, Not Harder, with Learning Targets
119(2)
The Open Letter Learning Target Rubric
121(4)
Minilessons Students Need to Keep Going
125(2)
Real Work: The Need for Audience and Authenticity
127(1)
What Works? Five CYA Strategies That Remove the Masks of Minimal Effort
128(3)
Chapter 6 The Mask of Invisibility
131(36)
Talking Isn't the Only Way to Show Thinking
132(1)
Making the Invisible Visible
133(1)
What They Are and What They Aren't
134(4)
Design Structures That Make Thinksheets Versatile
138(1)
Eight Go-To Structures for Thinksheets
139(1)
Provocative Question Reflections
139(4)
Double-Entry Diaries
143(5)
Inner Voice Sheets
148(5)
Synthesis Thinksheets
153(4)
Exit Tickets
157(1)
Vocabulary Builders
158(3)
Silent Reading Thinksheets
161(2)
Back to the Big Questions
163(2)
What Works? Five CYA Structures That Help Students Remove the Masks of Invisibility
165(2)
Chapter 7 When You Care, You Fall More
167(13)
Teachers Wear Masks, Too
168(1)
A Last Look at Our Big Questions
169(4)
The Six Ts Are Our Tools
173(4)
One Last Story
177(1)
We Determine the Weather
178(2)
Appendices
180(29)
Appendix A Learning Target Rubrics
182(6)
Appendix B Double-Entry Diaries
188(6)
Appendix C Inner Voice Sheets
194(4)
Appendix D Synthesis Sheets
198(5)
Appendix E Vocabulary Builders
203(3)
Appendix F Silent Reading Response Sheet
206(1)
Appendix G Virtual Background Knowledge Placemats
207(2)
References 209
Cris loves studying the "knowing-doing" gap by investigating how to implement best practice research with 125+ students. Throughout her career, she has tried to take reading and writing research and apply it to all kinds of learning situations. She believes it is important to share with colleagues her successes as well as her failures to highlight how incredibly complex teaching is.

For the past 34 years, Cris has taught grades one through twelve. In addition to being a classroom teacher, shes had the privileged of working with preservice and secondary teachers. She served several years as an adjust professor at the University of Colorado at Denver and the Denver University.

Cris provides workshops on disciplinary literacy as well as assessment for learning. Her focus is modeling how to integrate literacy strategies into lessons so students can be better readers and writers of disciplinary text. Her favorite days are the ones when she gets to plan with teachers and then work in classrooms with students. Cris strives to walk the talk as she models for teachers how to plan for engagement and execute instruction so that students get to read, write, and discuss for more minutes of the class period than their teacher talks.

Cris new book is titled, Why Do I Have to Read This? Literacy Strategies to Engage Our Most Reluctant Students. Other books she has written are: I Read it but I Dont Get It, Do I Really Haveto Teach Reading? So, What do They Really Know? And No More Telling as Teaching: Less Lecture, More Engaged Learning.