Free Reproducibles
The Right to Be Literate
Literacy skills are of paramount importance to students in the digital age. In this book, teachers and administrators will explore the six comprehensive skill areas essential to 21st century literacy—reading, writing, listening, speaking, viewing, and representing. Learn practical strategies for teaching students the skills they need to think critically and communicate collaboratively in the 21st century.
Benefits
- Examine aspects of receptive and expressive language.
- Understand the different categories of formative assessment.
- Explore examples of each literacy strategy at the elementary, middle, and secondary levels.
- Contemplate standards-based strategies and the thinking skills they target.
- Access discussion questions, and review literacy strategies to use in a professional learning community.
- Discover what parents can do to support student literacy skills.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: Receptive and Expressive Language
Chapter 1: Read Fast: Read With Reason and Purpose
Chapter 2: Write Well: Write Every Day in Every Way
Chapter 3: Listen Hard: Hear What Is Said
Chapter 4: Speak True: Say What You Mean
Chapter 5: View Always: Picture It
Chapter 6: Represent Often: Show, Don’t Tell
Appendix: Strategies to Use in a Professional Learning Community
REPRODUCIBLES
SUGGESTED RESOURCES
Websites
- Alfie Kohn, “How Education Reform Traps Poor Children”
- Animoto
- Interactivate
- Math Is Fun, “Introduction to US Standard Units”
- Math Is Fun, “Measuring Metrically With Maggie”
- Robin Fogarty and Associates, “Architects of the Intellect”
Book
- Bellanca, J. A., Fogarty, R. J., & Pete, B. M. (2012). How to Teach Thinking Skills Within the Common Core: 7 Key Student Proficiencies of the New National Standards. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree Press.