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Teaching - Reading, Cognitive Science, Educational Psychology, Psychology of Education, Learning, Cognitive Psychology, Education - Research
Comprehension Instruction: Research-Based Best Practices by Cathy Collins Block β€” book cover

Comprehension Instruction: Research-Based Best Practices

by Cathy Collins Block (Editor), Sheri R. Parris (Editor), Lesley Mandel Morrow
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Overview

Now in a substantially revised and updated second edition, this comprehensive professional resource and text is based on cutting-edge research. In each chapter, leading scholars provide an overview of a particular aspect of comprehension, offer best-practice instructional guidelines and policy recommendations, present key research questions still to be answered, and conclude with stimulating questions for individual study or discussion. All 25 chapters are new, with coverage of such timely topics as differentiated instruction, technology and reading comprehension, teaching English language learners, and the implications of current neuroscientific findings.

Synopsis

This comprehensive professional resource and text is based on cutting-edge research. In each chapter, leading scholars provide an overview of a particular aspect of comprehension, offer best-practice instructional guidelines and policy recommendations, present key research questions still to be answered, and conclude with stimulating questions for individual study or discussion. Coverage includes such timely topics as differentiated instruction, technology and reading comprehension, teaching English language learners, and the implications of current neuroscientific findings.

Children's Literature

This book starts by examining all of the existing theories and research about teaching reading in the classroom, including what works and what doesn't work. Then, several chapters examine how the brain can affect reading comprehension. Not until almost halfway through the book do the chapters begin to speak to teachers about how to apply this information in their own classroom. Here, the focus tends to be on the best way for students to comprehend certain types of text, but the chapters lack enough practical ways that a teacher can do this in his or her classroom. The primary strength of this book is that the editors try to explain the impact of research and practice on the future classroom. This enables educators to see both the implications of taking these theories and applying them in the classroom and the validity of teaching students to comprehend using new technology. This book would be an excellent textbook for a college course about teaching reading; however, for a practicing teacher, there is simply not enough usable information that can be applied directly in the classroom. Reviewer: Shelly Shaffer

About the Author, Cathy Collins Block

Cathy Collins Block, PhD, has served on the graduate faculty of Texas Christian University (TCU) since 1977. She presently serves, has served, or was elected to serve on the Board of Directors of the International Reading Association, National Reading Conference, Literacy First, New Zealand AWARD Program, U.S. Department of Education Regional Research Laboratory, Pacific Resources for Education and Learning Laboratory, National Center for Learning Disabilities, IBM Education Board of Advisors, National Center for Learning Disabilities, America Tomorrow, and Nobel Learning Communities. Dr. Block has written more than 250 research articles, books, and chapters concerning comprehension development, vocabulary achievement, exemplary teaching practices, and effects of curricular initiatives on student literacy success. She has taught every grade level, from preschool to graduate school, and served as consultant to hundreds of school districts in the United States and around the world. In 2005, she received the highest award bestowed by TCU to a professor for her outstanding teaching and scholarship across the country: the Chancellor’s Award for Distinguished Teaching and Scholarship.

 

Sheri R. Parris, MEd, is currently completing her PhD at the University of North Texas while teaching undergraduate reading courses. Her major area of study is reading education, with a minor in neuroscience. As a former middle school teacher, her emphasis is on secondary reading issues. Currently, she serves as Secretary and Vice President of the Gifted and Talented Special Interest Group of the International Reading Association (IRA) and has recently served on the IRA Adolescent Literacy Committee. Ms. Parris was invited to speak at the 2007 IRA conference to present "The Expertise of Adolescent Literacy Teachers," published in April 2007 in the Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy. Additionally, she coauthored two chapters in the 2006 book Collaborative Literacy: Using Gifted Strategies to Enrich Learning for Every Student (by Susan E. Israel, Dorothy A. Sisk, and Cathy Collins Block), which was nominated for the 2007 Ed Fry Book Award of the National Reading Conference.

Reviews

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Editorials

Children's Literature - Shelly Shaffer

This book starts by examining all of the existing theories and research about teaching reading in the classroom, including what works and what doesn't work. Then, several chapters examine how the brain can affect reading comprehension. Not until almost halfway through the book do the chapters begin to speak to teachers about how to apply this information in their own classroom. Here, the focus tends to be on the best way for students to comprehend certain types of text, but the chapters lack enough practical ways that a teacher can do this in his or her classroom. The primary strength of this book is that the editors try to explain the impact of research and practice on the future classroom. This enables educators to see both the implications of taking these theories and applying them in the classroom and the validity of teaching students to comprehend using new technology. This book would be an excellent textbook for a college course about teaching reading; however, for a practicing teacher, there is simply not enough usable information that can be applied directly in the classroom. Reviewer: Shelly Shaffer

From the Publisher

"From theory to classroom practice, this well-organized and highly usable text represents an integrative view of the nature of reading comprehension. The text will provide graduate students with comprehensive foundational knowledge and will stimulate researchers in the field to consider new ways to investigate reading comprehension and classroom instruction. Block, Parris, and their colleagues have developed a book that offers information and support for teachers of young, adolescent, and struggling learners, as well as English language learners."--Pamela J. Dunston, PhD, School of Education, Clemson University

"This volume, a most worthy follow-up to the first edition, gets to the heart of how we comprehend text and how to best foster the development of comprehension in students. The array of topics and the quality of the chapters contribute breadth and depth to the ongoing evolution of knowledge in this critical area. This book is well situated at the convergence of theory and practice and, as such, I recommend it for graduate courses for teachers and researchers."--Peter Afflerbach, PhD, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, University of Maryland

"This is a book that needs to be read by all educators! This second edition examines groundbreaking research that is becoming more important in education today, such as the brain processes involved in the ability to comprehend text. This book is an invaluable resource for teachers of all grade levels who are serious about reading and comprehension."--John Scovill, Jr., third-grade teacher, Washington County School District, St. George, Utah

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2008
Publisher
Guilford Publications, Inc.
Pages
447
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781593857004

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