Teaching Informational Text in K-3 Classrooms
Best Practices to Help Children Read, Write, and Learn from Nonfiction
Mariam Jean Dreher and Sharon Benge Kletzien
HardcoverPaperbacke-bookprint + e-book
Hardcover
orderSeptember 18, 2015
ISBN 9781462522279
Price: $48.00 192 Pages
Size: 7" x 10"
Paperback
orderSeptember 19, 2015
ISBN 9781462522262
Price: $32.00 192 Pages
Size: 7" x 10"
Request a free digital professor copy on VitalSource ?
Ideal for Professional Development
Includes Common Core Content
Includes Common Core Content
The reproducible materials can be downloaded and printed in PDF format.
“This is a book to keep on my desk and refer to throughout the year! It’s well written, fast paced, easy to understand, and full of ready-to-use ideas. It will be valuable for primary-grade teachers and teachers-in-training, and it’s perfect for a teacher study group. Students who are lucky enough to have a savvy teacher using this book will have more and better access to information books and be better prepared for their future education and careers.”
—Laura Broach, MEd, reading specialist; past president, Massachusetts Reading Association
“An excellent guide. The inclusion of classroom examples and many hands-on application tools—such as the extensive list of sources for informational text, reproducible checklists for implementing the practices discussed, and rubrics for choosing quality texts—makes this a resource of great utility for the classroom and preservice teacher. The questions, reflections, and classroom engagement activities at the end of each chapter make the book a good choice for teacher-led book study groups. Students in primary-grades literacy methods classes at the graduate and undergraduate levels will find it a valuable text.”
—Carol A. Donovan, PhD, Director, Belser–Parton Literacy Center, University of Alabama
“This teacher-friendly, resource-rich book provides the reader with both contextual understanding of using informational text and practical knowledge of how to implement the strategies immediately in the classroom. Maximizing instructional time to incorporate the teaching of nonfiction is paramount to achieving high standards. The authors supply useful planning tools, samples of student work, and models for replication. This is a 'must read' for K-3 teachers, reading specialists, special educators, academic coaches/instructional support teachers, and administrators.”
—Ryan T. Monaghan, EdD, K-12 Supervisor of Instruction and Language Arts, Owen J. Roberts School District, Pottstown, Pennsylvania
“This book delivers on its title in a powerful way. It guides teachers to tackle the current demand for effective use of informational text in the primary grades. The authors skillfully show how to take students through the process of digging into, enjoying, developing, and learning from informational text in the classroom through reading, writing, and research. The format and writing style are ideal for a group book study for professional learners. I have been in education for more than 30 years, and find this book to be particularly helpful.”
—Elisa Magee, MEd, academic coach, Chandler, Arizona, public schools
—Laura Broach, MEd, reading specialist; past president, Massachusetts Reading Association
“An excellent guide. The inclusion of classroom examples and many hands-on application tools—such as the extensive list of sources for informational text, reproducible checklists for implementing the practices discussed, and rubrics for choosing quality texts—makes this a resource of great utility for the classroom and preservice teacher. The questions, reflections, and classroom engagement activities at the end of each chapter make the book a good choice for teacher-led book study groups. Students in primary-grades literacy methods classes at the graduate and undergraduate levels will find it a valuable text.”
—Carol A. Donovan, PhD, Director, Belser–Parton Literacy Center, University of Alabama
“This teacher-friendly, resource-rich book provides the reader with both contextual understanding of using informational text and practical knowledge of how to implement the strategies immediately in the classroom. Maximizing instructional time to incorporate the teaching of nonfiction is paramount to achieving high standards. The authors supply useful planning tools, samples of student work, and models for replication. This is a 'must read' for K-3 teachers, reading specialists, special educators, academic coaches/instructional support teachers, and administrators.”
—Ryan T. Monaghan, EdD, K-12 Supervisor of Instruction and Language Arts, Owen J. Roberts School District, Pottstown, Pennsylvania
“This book delivers on its title in a powerful way. It guides teachers to tackle the current demand for effective use of informational text in the primary grades. The authors skillfully show how to take students through the process of digging into, enjoying, developing, and learning from informational text in the classroom through reading, writing, and research. The format and writing style are ideal for a group book study for professional learners. I have been in education for more than 30 years, and find this book to be particularly helpful.”
—Elisa Magee, MEd, academic coach, Chandler, Arizona, public schools