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Learning to write for readers using brain-based strategies / John T. Crow.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Urbana, Ill. : National Council of Teachers of English, c2011.Description: xv, 157 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0814127827 (pbk)
  • 9780814127827 (pbk)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • P 372.623044 CRO 23
LOC classification:
  • LB1576 .C828 2011
Contents:
Feeding reading -- Economy of effort and the self-Googling brain -- Reader expectations and the essay -- Reading like writers -- Exploring the concept of sentence -- Exploring the concept of paragraph -- Exploring the concept of essay -- Dialectically diverse writers -- Appendixes. Paris in the spring sign -- Textual analysis worksheet -- Sentence linkage worksheet.
Summary: As students move from grade to grade, they often seem to forget writing concepts, skills, and strategies taught in previous years. How can we help ensure that our writing instruction and student learning stick? Many of the concepts we try to teach students in our writing and literature classrooms are difficult to explain or demonstrate. But once students have a basic idea of how a reader's brain processes written material, these same concepts become more accessible, more logical, and therefore more teachable. In the first two chapters of Learning to Write for Readers, John T. Crow uses nontechnical language and fun classroom demonstrations to explore how proficient readers process written material. The remaining chapters apply this perspective to specific areas of writing instruction, including: analyzing texts and audiences; experimenting with sentences, paragraphs, and essay writing; and helping Standard English learners acquire academic English. This brain-based approach to writing instruction will help you build from the tremendous storehouse of knowledge students already possess about language to help them learn what they need to know about writing. - Publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Lise Kütüphanesi / High School Library Öğretmen Kaynakları / Teacher Resources (HS) P 372.623044 CRO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available T 326638

Includes bibliographical references (p. 147-151) and index.

Feeding reading -- Economy of effort and the self-Googling brain -- Reader expectations and the essay -- Reading like writers -- Exploring the concept of sentence -- Exploring the concept of paragraph -- Exploring the concept of essay -- Dialectically diverse writers -- Appendixes. Paris in the spring sign -- Textual analysis worksheet -- Sentence linkage worksheet.

As students move from grade to grade, they often seem to forget writing concepts, skills, and strategies taught in previous years. How can we help ensure that our writing instruction and student learning stick? Many of the concepts we try to teach students in our writing and literature classrooms are difficult to explain or demonstrate. But once students have a basic idea of how a reader's brain processes written material, these same concepts become more accessible, more logical, and therefore more teachable. In the first two chapters of Learning to Write for Readers, John T. Crow uses nontechnical language and fun classroom demonstrations to explore how proficient readers process written material. The remaining chapters apply this perspective to specific areas of writing instruction, including: analyzing texts and audiences; experimenting with sentences, paragraphs, and essay writing; and helping Standard English learners acquire academic English. This brain-based approach to writing instruction will help you build from the tremendous storehouse of knowledge students already possess about language to help them learn what they need to know about writing. - Publisher.

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