Brookes Logo
site utilities
top level navigation
E-mail NewslettersProfessional DevelopmentFor FacultyScreening and AssessmentWhat's NewBrookes Store
second level navigation

Customer ServiceSavings SpecialsBrowse Store by Subject
design element


Learn More About This Book:

Table of Contents

Read an Excerpt:
Read about the Three-Legged Instructional Model for Teaching Reading to Struggling Learners



Related Titles:

Academic Success Strategies for Adolescents with Learning Disabilities and ADHD

Multisensory Teaching of Basic Language Skills, Third Edition






Teaching Reading to Struggling Learners
By Esther Minskoff, Ph.D.



Identifying the best way to help students who struggle with reading — whether they have learning disabilities, are English language learners, or just need extra support — is a challenge for any teacher. Schools can make that task easier with this indispensable resource, a complete guide to addressing each student’s specific instructional needs and teaching reading skills side-by-side with critical language and thinking skills. Approaching literacy development as a complex process that unfolds over time, this book gives educators the guidance they need to help students continuously advance and deepen their reading skills — not just in the early grades, but into the upper grades as well. Readers will learn how to

  • teach the skills identified in the Reading First initiative: phonological awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension

  • teach comprehension skills along with key language skills in vocabulary and syntax

  • guide students in learning literal, inferential, and evaluative comprehension skills along with thinking skills

  • teach comprehension skills for narrative, expository, and electronic text

  • facilitate mastery of reading skills by using strategic, explicit teaching

  • make teaching more effective and engaging through practical suggestions, model lessons, and sample activities for both younger and older students

  • monitor the effectiveness of instruction
All the suggested ideas and approaches are evidence-based or identified as best practices in reading, so educators can use them with confidence in their classrooms. Equally effective as a text for preservice educators, a manual for in-service teachers, and a resource for administrators wrestling with different approaches to reading instruction, this in-depth, accessible book will lead to sharper skills and better outcomes for a wide range of struggling learners.

Attention, Memory, and Executive Function

ORDERING INFO
ISBN 1-55766-669-5
P
aperback
304 pages /
7 x 10
2005 / $31.95
Stock# 6695


Exam Copy

Brookes On Location logoProfessional development on this title is available through Brookes On Location!

Table of Contents


About the Author
Foreword
Nancy Mather

Introduction
Acknowledgments
  1. A Three-Legged Instructional Model for Teaching Reading to Struggling Learners

  2. S.E.T.: Strategic, Explicit Teaching

  3. Building a Solid Foundation: Teaching Pre-Reading Skills

  4. Breaking the Code: Teaching Phonics Skills

  5. Reading the Big Words: Teaching Structural Analysis Skills

  6. Teaching Words by Using Visual Cues

  7. Developing Speed and Accuracy: Teaching Fluency Skills

  8. Teaching Reading Comprehension: The Basic Approach

  9. Teaching Reading Comprehension and Language Skills

  10. Teaching Reading Comprehension and Cognitive Processing

  11. Teaching Reading Comprehension with Different Text Structures

  12. Assessment for Planning and Monitoring Reading Instruction
References
Appendix A: Glossary
Appendix B: Tests for Assessing Reading
Appendix C: Proficiency Tests for Phonological Awareness, Phonics, and Structural Analysis
Appendix D: Programs for Teaching Reading to Struggling Learners
Appendix E: Reading Skills Record Form
Appendix F: Games for Making Reading Instruction Fun
Appendix G: Fry Readability Graph for Estimating Readability-Extended
Index


© Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co., Inc. | brookes store | contact us | site map | home