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Struggling Readers Can Succeed

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This text addresses the diverse needs of struggling readers, considering factors like ethnicity, socio-economic levels, and experiences. Through case studies, it suggests adapting research-based in...
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  • 23 May 2013
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In spite of No Child Left Behind and the support provided by Response To Intervention, significant numbers of students continue to struggle with literacy. This text addresses learning-related needs of individual students in addition to interventions for the challenges they face. Struggling readers represent many different ethnicities, socio-economic levels, languages, and dialects in any combination and possess an even wider variety of social, cultural, motivational, literacy, and real world experiences. Through the presentation of case studies, this book considers these factors and their influence on literacy development and suggests ways to adapt research-based instructional strategies and approaches, as well as classroom practices to address them. It also includes related recommended resources. The text appeals to the concerns of classroom teachers, reading specialists, and faculty in teacher education programs, as well as anyone looking for practical, research-based ways to further the literacy development of individuals who struggle to read.

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Price: $54.00
Pages: 232
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Information Age Publishing
Series: Literacy, Language and Learning
Publication Date: 23 May 2013
ISBN: 9781623961800
Format: Paperback
BISACs: EDUCATION / Language Experience Approach, Philosophy and theory of education, Teaching of a specific subject
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Foreword.
Introduction.
Chapter 1. Bradford Holt and How Money Matters in Learning to Read, Catherine Compton-Lilly.
Chapter 2. Changing Outcomes in Reading for Bryant, an African American Urban Learner: A Case Study, Doris Walker-Dalhouse and A. Derick Dalhouse.
Chapter 3. The Many Faces of Dane: Viewing Boys as a Resource in Their Own Literacy Development, William G. Brozo.
Chapter 4. Striking a Balance: Implications for Struggling Readers' and Writers' Classroom Immersion in the New Literacies, Francine Falk-Ross.
Chapter 5. Could Abby Have Dyslexia? A Long Journey to Confidence, Erika S. Gray and Allison Ward Parsons.
Chapter 6. I Read Only Dog Books! Engaged Reading for Students on the Autistic Spectrum, Barbara Ann Marinak, Linda B. Gambrell, and Jacquelynn A. Malloy.
Chapter 7. Yolanda: Cultural Differences as a Resource for Literacy Learning, Christopher J. Rivera and Kimberley Kennedy Cuero.
Chapter 8. What Works for Ramon and Other English Language Learners, Sandra E. Gandy.
Chapter 9. Developing Young Children's Multifaceted Understandings of Writing, Julie K. Kidd and M. Susan Burns.
Chapter 10. After School Programs: Literacy Opportunities for Deshawn and Other Struggling Adolescent Readers, Roberta Linder.
Chapter 11. Changing Preservice Teachers' Deficit Beliefs and Attitudes Toward the Literacy Abilities of Tamika and Susana, Nina L. Nilsson.
About the Editors.