Developing Mathematical Literacy Through Adolescent Literature

Developing Mathematical Literacy Through Adolescent Literature

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  • Author: Paula Greathouse
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
  • ISBN: 1475861540
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 235

Students are offered opportunities to explore multiple mathematical topics such as probabilities, statistics, linear equations, integers, and sequencing, as well as algebra, pre-calculus and calculus concepts through literature. As students develop mathematical literacy, they will also explore literary elements such as characterization, setting, and conflict.


Adolescent Literature as a Complement to the Content Areas

Adolescent Literature as a Complement to the Content Areas

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  • Author: Paula Greathouse
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
  • ISBN: 1475831692
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 202

This text offers 6th - 12th grade educators guided instructional approaches for including young adult (YA) literature in science and math classes in order to promote literacy development while learning content.


Trauma-Sensitive Literacy Instruction

Trauma-Sensitive Literacy Instruction

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  • Author: Rachelle S. Savitz
  • Publisher: Teachers College Press
  • ISBN: 0807782017
  • Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 177

It is vital for educators to be aware of how traumatic experiences affect today’s students, yet few teachers learn the tools needed to successfully teach these students. This book highlights how English Language Arts teachers, who are typically not licensed or specifically trained to work with trauma issues, can design and implement instruction that helps students see that they are supported. This book provides specific strategies for teaching literacy based on the authors’ extensive knowledge and experience in trauma-sensitive instruction, adolescent literacy, and culturally responsive–sustaining pedagogies. The authors show how to support middle and high school students with specific literacy practices (reading, speaking, listening, and writing) that build resilience. Trauma-Sensitive Literacy Instruction is for the many teachers who are unsure how to invite students and their traumas into classroom instruction and embed critical discussions and learning within their teaching practices and pedagogy. It will help ELA teachers navigate student trauma in a way that empowers both students and teachers. Book Features: Responds to research that consistently shows how schools are often places that marginalize—and sometimes traumatize or retraumatize—children. Offers specific information related to literature, writing, discussion, and inquiry activities focused on various traumatic experiences. Provides rationales and research, along with examples, teacher vignettes, and steps for incorporating relevant practices in classrooms (grades 6–12). “In this book, ELA teachers will find actionable pedagogical practices toward the transformative teaching trauma demands and the respect, care, and support along the way that ELA educators need and deserve.” —From the Foreword by Elizabeth Dutro, professor, University of Colorado Boulder


Power Tools

Power Tools

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  • Author: Jeanne Dyches
  • Publisher: Myers Education Press
  • ISBN: 1975505565
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 282

Virtually all national standards now require students and teachers to understand the particulars of disciplinary literacy. But recently emerging scholarship suggests that disciplinary literacy is, by itself, an incomplete and potentially problematic approach to secondary literacy instruction. By asking students to “think like” or even “be like” experts, students may receive implicit messaging about whose knowledge is—and isn’t—valued. Critical disciplinary literacy (CDL) creates space for, and highlights connections between, critical literacies and disciplinary literacies. CDL acknowledges disciplines as unique communities with their own specialized (and often exclusionary) skills, norms, practices, and discourses, but deviates from conventional applications of disciplinary literacy by responding to the ways in which power systems and the analytic skills needed to understand them work differently based on the disciplines at hand. A CDL instructional approach acknowledges that applying the critical literacy skills of “reading the word and the world” to understand the power dynamics of vaccine distributions requires a different skill set and strategy approach than looking at textual representations of masculinity in Romeo and Juliet. Written by a team of educators with over 70 combined years of classroom experience, Power Tools: 30 Critical Disciplinary Literacy Strategies for 6–12 Classrooms offers readers research-based, multidisciplinary, ready-to-implement disciplinary literacy strategies from critical literacy lenses. The book sets itself apart from other strategy textbooks by offering creative strategy implementation that calls attention to power systems. Educators can learn, for example, how they might employ read-alouds to explore the global refugee crisis, or use the exit ticket strategy to help students reflect on the relationship between race and COVID statistics/experiences. Power Tools: 30 Critical Disciplinary Literacy Strategies for 6–12 Classrooms provides standards-aligned lessons that both challenge and extend traditional engagement practices to build a more just world. Each chapter includes: An overview of each strategy, situated within the research of best practices; Two disciplinary examples for each CDL strategy (e.g., an example of a CDL think-aloud in seventh grade math and tenth grade ELA classroom). Chapters provide resources such as examples of student work, discussion prompts, dialogue between teacher and students, and reprintables; Ideas for addressing resistance to CDL instruction. Preservice and in-service teachers, as well as teacher educators and researchers, looking to do and support justice-oriented work in disciplinary spaces will find value in the book. Power Tools is an ideal text to implement in courses such as Disciplinary Literacy, Secondary Literacy, Content Area Literacy, Methods/Strategies for Teaching Social Justice, Multicultural Education, ELA methods, Science methods, Social Studies methods, and Mathematics methods.


Mathematical Literacy

Mathematical Literacy

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  • Author: Denisse R. Thompson
  • Publisher: Heinemann Educational Books
  • ISBN: 9780325011233
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0

Language and communication are important to mathematics just as they are to the other content areas. Mathematical Literacy is a powerful resource that introduces you to a wide spectrum of strategies and approaches for building students' facility in mathematical communication. Mathematical Literacy demonstrates how immersion in the language of math supports improved learning through traditional communication skills such as: reading writing speaking listening as well as math-specific communication skills, including: symbolizing graphing creating diagrams using tables. It provides everything you need to increase the presence of mathematical language in your classroom, guiding you through the ample research base and theoretical underpinnings supporting its ideas, demonstrating implementation through detailed classroom vignettes, and presenting ready-to-use tools and activities that connect theory directly to practice. Whether you are an individual preservice or practicing teacher, part of a teacher book-study group, or creating whole-staff professional learning, Mathematical Literacy promotes professional learning with questions interspersed throughout that encourage reflection and prompt you to action. It offers many paths for teachers to take as they help students to improve their use of mathematical language and grow as mathematicians. Help every student become fluent readers, speakers, and writers of mathematics. Read Mathematical Literacy and give young adolescents new ways to explain their reasoning, make connections, debate their thinking with peers, and share their struggles - in short to understand mathematics deeply.


Developing Mathematical Thinking

Developing Mathematical Thinking

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  • Author: Jonathan D. Katz
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
  • ISBN: 147581058X
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 145

In this country we have done a poor job of helping students come to see the wonder, beauty and power of mathematics. Standards can be brought into the picture, but unless we think about what it means to truly engage students in mathematics we will continue to be unsuccessful. The goal of this book is to begin to change the way students experience mathematics in the middle and high school classrooms. In this book you will find a theoretical basis for this approach to teaching mathematics, multiple guides and questions for teachers to think about in relation to their everyday teaching, and over 30 examples of problems, lessons, tasks, and projects that been used effectively with urban students.


Math through Children's Literature

Math through Children's Literature

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  • Author: Kathryn Braddon
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
  • ISBN: 0313077800
  • Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 237

Use children's literature as a springboard to successful mathematical literacy. This book contains summaries of books, each related to the NCTM Standards, that will help children gain familiarity with and an understanding of mathematical concepts. Each chapter has classroom-tested activities and a bibliography of additional books to further expand student learning.


Meeting the Challenge of Adolescent Literacy

Meeting the Challenge of Adolescent Literacy

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  • Author: Mark W. Conley
  • Publisher: Guilford Publications
  • ISBN: 1462514669
  • Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 162

In this concise, thought-provoking book, prominent researchers analyze existing knowledge on adolescent literacy, examine the implications for classroom instruction, and offer specific goals for future research. The volume reviews cutting-edge approaches to understanding the unique features of teaching and learning in secondary schools. Particular attention is given to how teaching literacy across disciplines can improve students' content-area learning, and the book includes chapters dedicated to literacy in math and science classrooms. Also addressed are key findings and unresolved questions regarding fluency instruction, struggling adolescent readers, responding to the literacy needs of African American adolescents, and literacy coaching.


Adolescent Literacy in the Academic Disciplines

Adolescent Literacy in the Academic Disciplines

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  • Author: Tamara L. Jetton
  • Publisher: Guilford Press
  • ISBN: 1462502857
  • Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 274

From leading authorities in both adolescent literacy and content-area teaching, this book addresses the particular challenges of literacy learning in each of the major academic disciplines. Chapters focus on how to help students successfully engage with texts and ideas in English/literature, science, math, history, and arts classrooms. The book shows that while general strategies for reading informational texts are essential, they are not enough—students also need to learn processing strategies that are quite specific to each subject and its typical tasks or problems. Vignettes from exemplary classrooms illustrate research-based ways to build content-area knowledge while targeting essential reading and writing skills.


Teaching Mathematics Through Reading

Teaching Mathematics Through Reading

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  • Author: Faith Wallace
  • Publisher: Linworth
  • ISBN: 1586833243
  • Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0

Get the most from your instructional minutes with students by using the ideas in this research-based book to teach mathematical literacy! • Encourages teachers and librarians to use all types of texts to teach mathematical concepts and standards to young people • Shows how to use informational trade books, literature, and environmental text to infuse mathematics into your lessons • Subjects taught and illustrated with text and activities include number and operations, algebra, geometry, measurement, and data analysis This book provides teachers and administrators with alternative text sources and activities for supporting the development of mathematics as well as reading. In Section 1 you will find a variety of text types and annotated bibliographies for teachers to select the most appropriate texts for their classrooms. Section 2 offers several ideas, strategies, and activities that meet the standards of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM).