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Writing skills are essential for success in 21st-century schools and workplaces, but most classrooms devote far more time to reading. This insightful professional development resource and text discusses why and how to integrate writing and reading instruction in grades K-12 and beyond. Contributors explore how to harness writing-reading connections in such areas as phonics and spelling, vocabulary, and understanding genre and text structure, as well as across content areas. Considerations in teaching emergent bilingual students and struggling learners are highlighted. User-friendly features…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Writing skills are essential for success in 21st-century schools and workplaces, but most classrooms devote far more time to reading. This insightful professional development resource and text discusses why and how to integrate writing and reading instruction in grades K-12 and beyond. Contributors explore how to harness writing-reading connections in such areas as phonics and spelling, vocabulary, and understanding genre and text structure, as well as across content areas. Considerations in teaching emergent bilingual students and struggling learners are highlighted. User-friendly features include classroom examples and action questions that facilitate learning and application.
Autorenporträt
Zoi A. Philippakos, PhD, is Associate Professor in the Department of Theory and Practice in Teacher Education at The University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Her research interests include reading and writing instruction in K-12 and postsecondary classrooms, strategy instruction with self-regulation, and teacher professional development. Dr. Philippakos is a recipient of the Faculty Research Excellence Award from the College of Education, Health, and Human Sciences and the Provost Award for Professional Promise in Research and Creative Achievement from The University of Tennessee, as well as the Early Career Achievement Award from the Literacy Research Association. She chaired the Writing Task Force for the International Literacy Association and coauthored a Research Advisory titled Teaching Writing to Improve Reading Skills. Dr. Philippakos is coauthor or coeditor of several books and presents her work at national and international conferences. Steve Graham, EdD, is a Regents Professor and the Warner Professor in the Division of Leadership and Innovation at Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, Arizona State University. For more than 40 years, he has studied how writing develops, how to teach it effectively, and how it can be used to support reading and learning. Dr. Graham's research involves typically developing writers and students with special needs in both elementary and secondary schools, with much of this research occurring in classrooms in urban schools. Dr. Graham is a recipient of the Thorndike Career Award from Division 15 of the American Psychological Association, the William S. Gray Citation of Merit from the International Literacy Association, and the Exemplary Research in Teaching and Teacher Education Award from Division K of the American Educational Research Association, among other awards. He is the former editor of several journals, including the Journal of Writing Research, and is coauthor or coeditor of several books and three influential Carnegie Corporation reports on writing.