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Why reading literature in school still matters
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ISBN: 1135634645 141060344X 1282374249 9786612374241 058541520X 9780585415208 9781410603449 0805842284 0805842292 9780805842289 9781135634599 9781135634636 9781135634643 9780805842296 1135634637 Year: 2002 Publisher: Mahwah, N.J. L. Erlbaum

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Why Reading Literature in School Still Matters: Imagination, Interpretation, Insight explains how a reader's involvement with literary texts can create conditions for developing deep insight into human experience, and how teachers can develop these interpretive possibilities in school contexts. Developed from the author's many years of research, this book offers both a theoretical framework that draws from an interdisciplinary array of sources and many compelling and insightful examples of literary engagement of child, adolescent, and adult readers, as well as practical advice for teach

Action research as a living practice
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0820438650 Year: 1997 Publisher: New York (N.Y.): Lang

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Ideas that changed literacy practices : first-person accounts from leading voices
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1975503961 Year: 2022 Publisher: Gorham, Maine : Myers Education Press,

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How do ideas change practices and people? In Ideas That Changed Literacy Practices, 32 influential scholars in literacy education get personal about how they have worked on ideas and how those ideas have worked on them. Together, the essays offer never-before revealed personal histories of the authors' published writing about ideas that have shaped the field of literacy education. As a collection, the essays highlight some of the major themes that have guided and changed literacy practices over the last few decades. They also offer a rare glimpse into the complex ways histories of research emerge alongside personal and political influences on policy and practice. The volume includes an introductory chapter by Sumara and Alvermann in which they detail the processes they used in creating a context for the significance of this work. They begin with the premise that most literacy scholars rarely, if ever, reveal their personal and intellectual investments in ideas that have animated their research and other scholarly endeavors. That this observation rang true for all of the contributors was evidenced in their responses to the invitation. For example, some replied by saying this was the most exciting project they had engaged in because it required reflection on what motivated them to write the requested 3,500-word essay; others mentioned they were looking forward to readingwhat their peers would share.

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