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James V. Hoffman - Balancing principles for teaching elementary reading

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This book appears at a time when the crisis rhetoric about schools, teaching, and learning to read is extremely high. There is a rising call within the profession for a balanced perspective on reading. Balancing Principles for Teaching Elementary Reading aspires to help set the agenda for improving the quality of literacy instruction in the United States--by recentering the debate from Whats better, whole language or phonics? to What can we do in reading instruction to prepare all children for the literacy demands of the next century? The authors, all members of the professional community of reading educators, work on a daily basis with teachers in classrooms, prospective teachers, clinicians, and tutors. Their goal for this book is to represent what they have learned about effective teaching and learning as members of this community. It is written with four purposes in mind: * to offer a principled conception of reading and learning to read that is considerate of both the personal dimensions of literacy acquisition as well as the changes that are taking place in society, * to summarize key findings from the research that relate specifically to effective teaching practices, * to describe current practices in reading instruction with specific comparisons to the principles of effective practice that are identified, and * to suggest an action agenda that is school-based and designed to promote positive changes in the quality of instruction. This text offers a perspective for teaching that provokes members of the reading education community to think about their underlying beliefs about teaching and their shared commitment to making schools more effective for the students they serve. It is envisioned as a resource to be used in building a community of learners--to be read with professional colleagues in a course of study, in a teacher-researcher book club, or in some type of in-service setting. Readers are encouraged to debate the ideas presented, to challenge the authors conceptions with their own reality, to make sense within a community about what action is desirable. Some specific suggestions and strategies are provided as springboards for further exploration and action.

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title Balancing Principles for Teaching Elementary Reading author - photo 1

title:Balancing Principles for Teaching Elementary Reading
author:Hoffman, James V.; Baumann, James F.; Afflerbach, Peter.
publisher:Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
isbn10 | asin:0805829121
print isbn13:9780805829129
ebook isbn13:9780585307046
language:English
subjectReading (Elementary)
publication date:2000
lcc:LB1573. H459 2000eb
ddc:372.4
subject:Reading (Elementary)
Page iii
Balancing Principles for Teaching Elementary Reading
James V. Hoffman
The University of Texas at Austin
James F. Baumann
University of Georgia
Peter Afflerbach
The University of Maryland
With
Ann M. Duffy-Hester
University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Sarah J. McCarthey
The University of IllinoisChampaign-Urbana
Jennifer Moon Ro
University of Georgia
Page iv Copyright 2000 by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc All rights - photo 2
Page iv
Copyright 2000 by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by photostat, microfilm, retrieval system, or any other means, without prior written permission of the publisher.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., Publishers
10 Industrial Avenue
Mahwah, NJ 07430
Cover design by Kathryn Houghtaling Lacey
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hoffman, James V.
Balancing principles for teaching elementary reading /
James V. Hoffman, James F. Baumann, PeterAfflerbach, with
Ann M. Duffy-Hester, Sarah J. McCarthey, Jennifer Moon Ro.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8058-2912-1 (cloth : alk. paper)
ISBN 0-8058-2913-X (pbk.: alk. paper)
1. Reading (Elementary) I. Baumann, James F.
II. Afflerbach, Peter. III. Title.
LB1573.H459 2000
372.4 dc21 99-088957
CIP
Books published by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates are printed on acid-free paper, and their bindings are chosen for strength and durability.
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Page v
Contents
Preface
vii
Part I: Our Professional Stance
James V. Hoffman
1
Part II: Our Principles and Our Practices
James V. Hoffman and Sarah J. McCarthey
11
Part IIl: Our Past and Our Present
James F. Baumann, Ann M. Duffy-Hester, Jennifer Moon Ro, and James V. Hoffman
59
Part IV: Our Plans and Our Future
Peter Afflerbach
75
Author Index
103
Subject Index
107

Page vii
Preface
The students in our schools are failing to learn to read, and poor teaching is at fault. Would you be surprised to read such a statement as a headline in the morning newspaper? Probably not. We write this book at a time when the crisis rhetoric about schools, teaching, and learning to read is extremely high. As educators, our instinctive reaction to this kind of criticism is to dig in our heels and loudly defend ourselves and our profession. Such a response does little to quiet the debate, nor do references to research documenting our growing successes in teaching reading serve to bring civility and reason to the discussion. We will never win this debate because this debate is not just about teaching reading. This debate has more to do with issues of power, control, economics, and politics than it does with reading pedagogy. But the reality is that we must continue to live and work in the context of this debate.
There are very real needs in our schools today. We are not as successful as we should be with literacy instruction in our work with minority children, children of poverty, and children for whom English is not a first language. However, let us not confuse this need with a general call for alarm and a portrayal of our
Picture 3Picture 4
The work reported herein is a National Reading Research Project of the University of Georgia and University of Maryland. It was supported under the Educational Research and Development Centers Program (PR/AWARD NO. 117A20007) as administered by the Office of Educational Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education. The findings and the opinions expressed here do not necessarily reflect the position or policies of the National Reading Research Center, the Office of Educational Research and Improvement, or the U.S. Department of Education.
Page viii
teaching and schools as failing. A crisis mode of thinking leads us to grasp for quick-fix solutions that are doomed to fail or, worse still, to have these kinds of nonsolutions imposed from above. The real challenges we face will take concentrated effort and time to resolve.
Crisis is not new to our profession. During the 1960s, Mary Austin and Coleman Morrison published a report of the findings from a comprehensive study of reading instruction in American schools entitled The First R: The Harvard Report on Reading in Elementary Schools.1 This study drew on data gathered from a national survey of teachers and administrators, selected interviews, and site visits to hundreds of schools and classrooms. The evidence and interpretations offered by Austin and Morrison were highly critical of reading instruction in American schools, and added fuel to the already heated "great debate" surrounding teaching practices. They found, in contradiction to the claims that phonics instruction had been abandoned in schools, that typical reading instruction was highly rote, mechanical, and skill/drill based. Again and again, the authors lamented the absence of a research base to inform practice. They raised numerous questions regarding the quality of instruction in schools and made a plea for reform.
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