Literacy in American Lives

Literacy in American Lives
Title Literacy in American Lives PDF eBook
Author Deborah Brandt
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 276
Release 2001-05-28
Genre History
ISBN 9780521003063

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This book addresses critical questions facing public education at the twenty-first century.

Literacy, Lives and Learning

Literacy, Lives and Learning
Title Literacy, Lives and Learning PDF eBook
Author David Barton
Publisher Routledge
Pages 194
Release 2012-11-12
Genre Education
ISBN 1136021507

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Demonstrating what it is like to be an adult learner in today’s world, this book focuses on language, literacy and numeracy learning. The authors explore the complex relationship between learning and adults’ lives, following a wide range of individual students in various formal learning situations, from college environments to a young homeless project, and a drug support and aftercare centre. The study is rooted in a social practices approach and examines how people’s lives shape their learning. Themes addressed range from: how literacy is learned through participation and how barriers such as violence and ill-health impact on people’s lives. Based on a major research project and detailed, reflexive and collaborative methodology, the book describes a coherent strategy of communication and impact which will have a direct effect on policy and practice

Reading for Our Lives

Reading for Our Lives
Title Reading for Our Lives PDF eBook
Author Maya Payne Smart
Publisher Penguin
Pages 241
Release 2022-08-02
Genre Education
ISBN 0593332180

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An award-winning journalist and literacy advocate provides a clear, step-by-step guide to helping your child thrive as a reader and a learner. When her child went off to school, Maya Smart was shocked to discover that a good education in America is a long shot, in ways that few parents fully appreciate. Our current approach to literacy offers too little, too late, and attempting to play catch-up when our kids get to kindergarten can no longer be our default strategy. We have to start at the top. The brain architecture for reading develops rapidly during infancy, and early language experiences are critical to building it. That means parents’ work as children’s first teachers begins from day one too—and we need deeper knowledge to play our positions. Reading for Our Lives challenges the bath-book-bed mantra and the idea that reading aloud to our kids is enough to ensure school readiness. Instead, it gives parents easy, immediate, and accessible ways to nurture language and literacy development from the start. Through personal stories, historical accounts, scholarly research, and practical tips, this book presents the life-and-death urgency of literacy, investigates inequity in reading achievement, and illuminates a path to a true, transformative education for all.

Reading Don't Fix No Chevys

Reading Don't Fix No Chevys
Title Reading Don't Fix No Chevys PDF eBook
Author Michael W. Smith
Publisher Paw Prints
Pages 0
Release 2008-11-11
Genre
ISBN 9781439573846

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Literacy in Practice

Literacy in Practice
Title Literacy in Practice PDF eBook
Author Patrick Thomas
Publisher Routledge
Pages 272
Release 2015-11-19
Genre Education
ISBN 1317360885

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The rise of New Literacy Studies and the shift from studying reading and writing as a technical process to examining situated literacies—what people do with literacy in particular social situations—has focused attention toward understanding the connections between reading and writing practices and the broader social goals and cultural practices these literacy practices help to shape. This collection brings together situated research studies of literacy across a range of specific contexts, covering everyday, educational, and workplace domains. Its contribution is to provide, through an empirical framework, a larger cumulative understanding of literacy across diverse contexts.

The Rise of Writing

The Rise of Writing
Title The Rise of Writing PDF eBook
Author Deborah Brandt
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 207
Release 2015-01-08
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 1107090318

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Drawing on real-life interviews, Brandt explores what happens when writing overtakes reading as the basis of people's daily literate experience.

American Literacy

American Literacy
Title American Literacy PDF eBook
Author J. North Conway
Publisher Quill
Pages 324
Release 1995-04
Genre History
ISBN 9780688140762

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