http://firsthand.heinemann.com http://pd.heinemann.com http://www.boyntoncook.com http://www.heinemanndrama.com

Home| About Us| Contact Us| Our Authors| College Professors| Mailing List| Help | My Account| View Cart
SEARCH
BROWSE
New Titles
firsthand
Literacy
Reading
Writing
Language Arts
English Lang. Acquisition
Mathematics
Social Studies
Science
Assessment
Staff/PD
Politics of Education
Multimedia
Professional Development
More >
OTHER RESOURCES
Author Guidelines
Sales Representatives

Read a Sample Chapter
When Reading Begins
The Teacher's Role in Decoding, Comprehension, and Fluency

Ardith Davis Cole

ISBN 978-0-325-00663-5 / 0-325-00663-6 / 2004 / 176pp / Paperback
Imprint: Heinemann
Availability: In Stock

Grade Level: K-3

List Price: $21.00
Earn Extra Credit! Click here to learn more.

Learn More
Description

There's no better informed, keener observer of the magical entry into reading than one who has helped more than 600 children become readers—someone who also devoted her doctoral research to reviewing dozens of videotapes of teachers working side by side with young students. That teacher-researcher is Ardith Cole, who has not only witnessed, but documented every explicit and nuanced instructional move regular classroom teachers make as they lead beginners into the world of print. In When Reading Begins she offers the most detailed, precise, and inspiring explanation of the exact moments when children cross the bridge into reading and the profoundly sensitive ways in which teachers make the crossing with them.

Cole clearly demonstrates why thoughtful teachers, rather than packaged, scripted, or systematized programs, are what schools need if they want to teach reading effectively. She shows how teachers' words and gestures support beginning readers within two instructional contexts:

  • the micro, which involves processes in sound patterns and meaning
  • the macro, which involves processes in chunking, comprehension, and fluency.
Cole argues that what works depends on the reader, the teacher, the text, and the context and that much too often practices and policies are implemented, even mandated, without much thought about variations in learners and/or teachers. She addresses the indispensables of reading instruction and shows how teachers use different techniques to scaffold readers as they move from preword reading into word reading and on to fluency. Through an engaging blend of lucid narrative, illuminating photos, transcripts, classroom vignettes, telling analogies and metaphors, and "Grist for Discussion," Cole will revitalize your perspective. Read her book to:
  • understand children's reading processes
  • plan instruction that is based on how children think and learn
  • individualize reading instruction
  • appreciate the complexity of your role in teaching reading
  • be inspired to take a closer look at your own practices.
Table of Contents
    1. Scaffolding: A Key to Reading Relationships
    2. The Cues Readers Use
    3. When and Where Teachers Scaffold
    4. The Cues Teachers Use
    5. How Teachers Scaffold Meaning and Syntax: Micro and Macro Processes
    6. How Teachers Scaffold Graphophonics: A Micro Process
    7. Pragmatic Relationships That Influence Cueing
    8. Cue Use and Abuse
    9. Into Fluency
Samples From this Title
Also Available From Ardith Davis Cole
Books
You Might Also Be Interested In...
  • About the Authors: Writing Workshop with Our Youngest Writers (Paperback)
  • How to Align Literacy Instruction, Assessment, and Standards: And Achieve Results You Never Dreamed Possible (Paperback)
  • Significant Studies for Second Grade: Reading and Writing Investigations for Children (Paperback)
  • Comprehension: Strategic Instruction for K-3 Children (Paperback)
  • Supporting Struggling Readers, 2nd edition (Paperback)
  • Copyright© 1999-2008 Heinemann, a division of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
    Terms of Use | Privacy Policy