Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hansen, Jane
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1987
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED282226
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867181888997687296
author Hansen, Jane
author_facet Hansen, Jane
Hansen, Jane
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents When Writers Read. Hansen, Jane Administrator Role Community Role Elementary Education Library Role Reader Response Reader Text Relationship Reading Instruction Reading Processes Reading Research Reading Skills Reading Writing Relationship Student Role Teacher Role Teacher Student Relationship Teaching Methods Theory Practice Relationship Writing Research Focusing on encouraging students to take responsibility for their own learning and giving them a sense of control over their efforts, this book explores how the response approach to writing instruction can be put to good use in teaching children to read. Respectively, chapters discuss (1) how the author learned about writing, reading, teaching, and learning; (2) writing with reference to time, choice, response, structure, and community; (3) how time affects reading; (4) how readers decide what to read, why they want to read a book, and which strategies to use; (5) responsibility between teachers and students, among students, and to the self; (6) the structure within which the teacher moves among the students and the students work together and alone; (7) the role of the community; (8) how listening affects reading; (9) how talking affects reading; (10) evaluation and reading attitudes; (11) the role of phonics; (12) skills, including context clues, spelling, phonics, punctuation, usage, and study skills; (13) the use of basal readers; (14) students' reading responses and sharing of their written work; (15) content area reading; (16) the teacher's role when using direct teaching methods; (17) the librarian's role; (18) the Chapter 1 teacher; (19) the administrator's role; (20) how students can grow up to know each other as writers, readers, and people; (21) teachers as independent learners; and (22) students as independent learners. A seven-page bibliography and an index are included. (JD)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED282226
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1987
record_format eric
spellingShingle When Writers Read.
Hansen, Jane
Administrator Role
Community Role
Elementary Education
Library Role
Reader Response
Reader Text Relationship
Reading Instruction
Reading Processes
Reading Research
Reading Skills
Reading Writing Relationship
Student Role
Teacher Role
Teacher Student Relationship
Teaching Methods
Theory Practice Relationship
Writing Research
When Writers Read. Hansen, Jane Administrator Role Community Role Elementary Education Library Role Reader Response Reader Text Relationship Reading Instruction Reading Processes Reading Research Reading Skills Reading Writing Relationship Student Role Teacher Role Teacher Student Relationship Teaching Methods Theory Practice Relationship Writing Research Focusing on encouraging students to take responsibility for their own learning and giving them a sense of control over their efforts, this book explores how the response approach to writing instruction can be put to good use in teaching children to read. Respectively, chapters discuss (1) how the author learned about writing, reading, teaching, and learning; (2) writing with reference to time, choice, response, structure, and community; (3) how time affects reading; (4) how readers decide what to read, why they want to read a book, and which strategies to use; (5) responsibility between teachers and students, among students, and to the self; (6) the structure within which the teacher moves among the students and the students work together and alone; (7) the role of the community; (8) how listening affects reading; (9) how talking affects reading; (10) evaluation and reading attitudes; (11) the role of phonics; (12) skills, including context clues, spelling, phonics, punctuation, usage, and study skills; (13) the use of basal readers; (14) students' reading responses and sharing of their written work; (15) content area reading; (16) the teacher's role when using direct teaching methods; (17) the librarian's role; (18) the Chapter 1 teacher; (19) the administrator's role; (20) how students can grow up to know each other as writers, readers, and people; (21) teachers as independent learners; and (22) students as independent learners. A seven-page bibliography and an index are included. (JD)
title When Writers Read.
topic Administrator Role
Community Role
Elementary Education
Library Role
Reader Response
Reader Text Relationship
Reading Instruction
Reading Processes
Reading Research
Reading Skills
Reading Writing Relationship
Student Role
Teacher Role
Teacher Student Relationship
Teaching Methods
Theory Practice Relationship
Writing Research
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED282226