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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roser, Nancy
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ874112
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author Roser, Nancy
author_facet Roser, Nancy
Roser, Nancy
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Policies Can Follow Practices Roser, Nancy Reading Instruction Instructional Materials Classroom Environment Teacher Influence Librarian Attitudes School Libraries Access to Information Selection Personal Autonomy Time Classroom Communication Roser discusses how both teachers and librarians, whom she calls the preservers of children's reading, should cling tightly to three essential practices to ensure that our children read more, read better, and read more widely. She argues we should: a) keep the classroom library viable; b) preserve, protect, and defend time for self-selected reading; and c) make certain there are shared texts to talk over or to "do" something about. Regardless of instructional climate, level of student, number of benchmark assessments, surety of supervisors, quoted and misquoted reports, and curricula that leans toward "one size fits all," Roser argues that teachers help to ensure that kids read both in school and beyond when they help make for access, choice, time, and talk in the classroom.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ874112
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2010
record_format eric
spellingShingle Policies Can Follow Practices
Roser, Nancy
Reading Instruction
Instructional Materials
Classroom Environment
Teacher Influence
Librarian Attitudes
School Libraries
Access to Information
Selection
Personal Autonomy
Time
Classroom Communication
Policies Can Follow Practices Roser, Nancy Reading Instruction Instructional Materials Classroom Environment Teacher Influence Librarian Attitudes School Libraries Access to Information Selection Personal Autonomy Time Classroom Communication Roser discusses how both teachers and librarians, whom she calls the preservers of children's reading, should cling tightly to three essential practices to ensure that our children read more, read better, and read more widely. She argues we should: a) keep the classroom library viable; b) preserve, protect, and defend time for self-selected reading; and c) make certain there are shared texts to talk over or to "do" something about. Regardless of instructional climate, level of student, number of benchmark assessments, surety of supervisors, quoted and misquoted reports, and curricula that leans toward "one size fits all," Roser argues that teachers help to ensure that kids read both in school and beyond when they help make for access, choice, time, and talk in the classroom.
title Policies Can Follow Practices
topic Reading Instruction
Instructional Materials
Classroom Environment
Teacher Influence
Librarian Attitudes
School Libraries
Access to Information
Selection
Personal Autonomy
Time
Classroom Communication
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ874112