The New Literacy is based on research but filled with common sense, cutting through much of the fog of current educational reform rhetoric. Using scholarship, interviews with real people, and current events, authors Morris and Tchudi weave a compelling argument and offer practical solutions to one of the most serious issues facing American education.
?Leila Christenbury, editor, The English Journal
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There is no question that literacy lies at the heart of education. But is our definition of literacy too narrow to encompass the demands of today's complex world?In this book, authors Paul J. Morris II and Stephen Tchudi explore what it means to be a literate person in the real world. Using interviews from a broad range of people, they reveal the gulf between what is taught in most schools and what is used in everyday life. In compelling stories--a college English teacher, a police officer, a newspaper journalist, a street sweeper, a fifth grader, and others--tell in their own words how they learned the necessary skills to function at work, in school, and in their communities. The authors identify the common characteristics in each of these stories and suggest ways in which these can be fostered in school classrooms and literacy programs.Morris and Tchudi make the case that successful literacy education demands the development and nurturing of complex cognitive skills, which in turn yield the ability to think critically and analytically and to communicate thoughts and ideas clearly and coherently. Through the use of thought- provoking dialogue, they demonstrate how to promote literacy and they offer reform strategies, curricula, and teaching innovations that can be adopted by public schools, colleges, and teacher education programs.
?The New Literacy is based on research but filled with common sense, cutting through much of the fog of current educational reform rhetoric. Using scholarship, interviews with real people, and current events, authors Morris and Tchudi weave a compelling argument and offer practical solutions to one of the most serious issues facing American education.?--Leila Christenbury, editor, The English JournalThere is no question that literacy lies at the heart of education. But is our definition of literacy too narrow to encompass the demands of today's complex world? In this book, authors Paul J. Morris II and Stephen Tchudi explore what it means to be a literate person in the real world. Using interviews from a broad range of people, they make the case that successful literacy education demands the development and nurturing of complex cognitive skills, which in turn yield the ability to think critically and analytically and to communicate thoughts and ideas clearly and coherently. Through the use of thought-provoking dialogue, they demonstrate how to promote literacy and they offer reform strategies, curricula, and teaching innovations that can be adopted by public schools, colleges, and teacher education programs.
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Seller: Carlson Turner Books, Portland, ME, U.S.A.
Softcover. Condition: VG+. A very nice copy with clean, bright interior pages and solid binding. Spine is uncreased. Uncommon. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 270 pages; Education. Seller Inventory # 44476
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