
Reading Strategies for Elementary Students With Learning Difficulties
Strategies for RTI
Corwin Press Inc
2nd Edition
Published on 23. March 2009
Book
Paperback/Softback
272 pages
978-1-4129-6069-4 (ISBN)
Description
"The authors have taken a huge amount of research and information, digested it, and organized it into clearly arranged, practical, readable, usable work. This book balances information, suggestions, and examples with reflective exercises that are practical and valuable. It also gives tons of Web sites and resources for more useful tools and tips."
-Mary Guerrette, Director of Special Education
Maine School Administrative District #1, ME
A one-stop source of proven reading strategies to use with RTI!
This second edition of a best-selling resource helps general and special education teachers integrate approaches for strengthening reading skills with procedures for Response to Intervention (RTI). Based on the latest research, these practical instructional strategies can be used with students with learning disabilities of any kind as well as with any student who struggles in reading.
This resource provides highly effective strategies for elementary and middle school reading instruction and includes RTI case studies that show how the strategies work within an RTI framework. Focusing on the critical areas of reading instruction identified in the National Reading Panel's report, this book helps educators:
Implement early literacy and brain-compatible reading instruction and assessment
Develop phonological and phonemic instruction
Promote effective progress monitoring in reading
Build vocabulary and reading fluency
Boost reading comprehension, especially in the content areas
This vital resource provides teachers with a ready reference of interventions to provide targeted reading instruction for students with learning difficulties.
-Mary Guerrette, Director of Special Education
Maine School Administrative District #1, ME
A one-stop source of proven reading strategies to use with RTI!
This second edition of a best-selling resource helps general and special education teachers integrate approaches for strengthening reading skills with procedures for Response to Intervention (RTI). Based on the latest research, these practical instructional strategies can be used with students with learning disabilities of any kind as well as with any student who struggles in reading.
This resource provides highly effective strategies for elementary and middle school reading instruction and includes RTI case studies that show how the strategies work within an RTI framework. Focusing on the critical areas of reading instruction identified in the National Reading Panel's report, this book helps educators:
Implement early literacy and brain-compatible reading instruction and assessment
Develop phonological and phonemic instruction
Promote effective progress monitoring in reading
Build vocabulary and reading fluency
Boost reading comprehension, especially in the content areas
This vital resource provides teachers with a ready reference of interventions to provide targeted reading instruction for students with learning difficulties.
Reviews / Votes
"The authors have taken a huge amount of research and information, digested it, and organized it into a clearly arranged, practical, readable, and usable work. This book balances information, suggestions, and examples with reflective exercises that are practical and valuable. It also gives tons of Web sites and resources for more useful tools and tips." -- Mary Guerrette, Director of Special Education "Provides research-based information about various reading difficulties from knowledgeable and reputable experts in the field. I appreciate the organizational features: the checklist of strategies at the beginning of each chapter, the reflective exercises throughout the book, teacher tips in each chapter, and the 'What's Next' section at the end, which is a good way of priming the brain for what it's about to learn." -- Sandra Rief, Speaker, Author, Educational ConsultantMore details
Edition
2nd Revised edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Thousand Oaks
United States
Publishing group
SAGE Publications Inc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
Revised edition
Dimensions
Height: 280 mm
Width: 216 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
692 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4129-6069-4 (9781412960694)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

William N. Bender | Martha J. Larkin
Reading Strategies for Elementary Students With Learning Difficulties
Strategies for RTI
Book
02/2009
2nd Edition
Corwin Press Inc
€94.90
Shipment within 10-20 days
Previous edition

William N. Bender | Martha J. Larkin
Reading Strategies for Elementary Students With Learning Difficulties
Book
07/2003
1st Edition
Corwin Press Inc
€47.27
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Persons
William N. Bender, PhD, has had a long and distinguished career in education, teaching in public school for several years and in higher education for some 26 years at Blue?eld State College in West Virginia, Rutgers University in New Jersey, and the University of Georgia. He has written 36 books in special and general education. With his retirement, he has stepped back from his rigorous workshop schedule, which as recently as 2016 included some 40 workshop days per year. While the COVID-19 pandemic impacted his work, he has written four historical ?ction novels and several educational books in recent years. He has delivered several professional development projects, including most recently a keynote for a virtual conference on project-based learning in Brazil in conjunction with his Corwin book Project-Based Learning (2012).
Martha J. Larkin taught public school students in general education and special education at the elementary, middle, and secondary levels for several years before beginning a career in higher education. She has authored and coauthored 17 journal articles, 10 book and monograph chapters, and 5 research reports and commissioned papers in education and special education. She specializes in instructional strategies, particularly for students with learning disabilities. Her specific teaching and research interests include scaffolded instruction, content enhancement, learning strategies, graphic organizers, and grading rubrics. She especially enjoys pursuing these interests in the areas of reading, writing, and mathematics. She earned her PhD from the University of Alabama in 1999.
Martha J. Larkin taught public school students in general education and special education at the elementary, middle, and secondary levels for several years before beginning a career in higher education. She has authored and coauthored 17 journal articles, 10 book and monograph chapters, and 5 research reports and commissioned papers in education and special education. She specializes in instructional strategies, particularly for students with learning disabilities. Her specific teaching and research interests include scaffolded instruction, content enhancement, learning strategies, graphic organizers, and grading rubrics. She especially enjoys pursuing these interests in the areas of reading, writing, and mathematics. She earned her PhD from the University of Alabama in 1999.
Content
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Introduction
1. The Reading Brain and Literacy Instruction
The Good News in Reading Research!
Big Ideas From Early Literacy Research
The Emerging Emphasis on Literacy
Assessments of Early Literacy
Brain-Compatible Reading Instruction
A Brain-Based Model of Reading
What the Brain Research on Reading Has Found
Conclusion
What's Next?
2. Phonemic Instruction: The Critical Emphasis in Reading and Literacy
Phonological Instruction and Phonemic Instruction
Phonemic Awareness or Phonemic Manipulation
Guidelines for Phonemic Instruction
Phonemic-Based Reading Programs
Conclusion
What's Next?
3. Phonics and Word Attack Strategies
Phonics and the Brain
Phonics Instructional Options
Strategies for Developmental Reading and Spelling Stages
Conclusion
What's Next?
4. Strategies for Building Vocabulary and Reading Fluency
Vocabulary and Reading Fluency
Building Vocabulary
The Importance of Vocabulary Development
Do We Still Need Sight-Word Approaches for Vocabulary Instruction?
How Good Readers Read
Learning New Vocabulary Terms
Word Recognition Instruction
Deriving Meaning From Vocabulary
Learning Strategies for Vocabulary Mastery
Reading Fluency
Conclusion
What's Next?
5. Gaining Meaning From Reading
Reading Comprehension and the Brain
Story Grammar
Student Think-Alouds or Inferencing Substrategies
Question Answering
List Summaries
Improvisational Drama
Cooperative Discussion and Questioning (Coop-Dis-Q)
Collaborating Strategic Reading (CSR)
Bibliotherapy
Conclusion
What's Next?
6. Reading Comprehension in the Content Areas
Content Area Reading and the Brain
KWPLS (Know, Want to Know, Predict, Learned, Summarize)
Analogies Instruction
Possible Sentences
Vocabulary Self-Collection Strategy (VSS)
Guided Reading in Textual Settings (GRITS)
ReQuest: Asking Self-Declared Questions
Idea Circles
Infra-Act: Sharing Perspectives
Question-Answer Relationships
Conclusion
Resources: Commercially Available Reading Programs
Glossary
Index
About the Authors
Introduction
1. The Reading Brain and Literacy Instruction
The Good News in Reading Research!
Big Ideas From Early Literacy Research
The Emerging Emphasis on Literacy
Assessments of Early Literacy
Brain-Compatible Reading Instruction
A Brain-Based Model of Reading
What the Brain Research on Reading Has Found
Conclusion
What's Next?
2. Phonemic Instruction: The Critical Emphasis in Reading and Literacy
Phonological Instruction and Phonemic Instruction
Phonemic Awareness or Phonemic Manipulation
Guidelines for Phonemic Instruction
Phonemic-Based Reading Programs
Conclusion
What's Next?
3. Phonics and Word Attack Strategies
Phonics and the Brain
Phonics Instructional Options
Strategies for Developmental Reading and Spelling Stages
Conclusion
What's Next?
4. Strategies for Building Vocabulary and Reading Fluency
Vocabulary and Reading Fluency
Building Vocabulary
The Importance of Vocabulary Development
Do We Still Need Sight-Word Approaches for Vocabulary Instruction?
How Good Readers Read
Learning New Vocabulary Terms
Word Recognition Instruction
Deriving Meaning From Vocabulary
Learning Strategies for Vocabulary Mastery
Reading Fluency
Conclusion
What's Next?
5. Gaining Meaning From Reading
Reading Comprehension and the Brain
Story Grammar
Student Think-Alouds or Inferencing Substrategies
Question Answering
List Summaries
Improvisational Drama
Cooperative Discussion and Questioning (Coop-Dis-Q)
Collaborating Strategic Reading (CSR)
Bibliotherapy
Conclusion
What's Next?
6. Reading Comprehension in the Content Areas
Content Area Reading and the Brain
KWPLS (Know, Want to Know, Predict, Learned, Summarize)
Analogies Instruction
Possible Sentences
Vocabulary Self-Collection Strategy (VSS)
Guided Reading in Textual Settings (GRITS)
ReQuest: Asking Self-Declared Questions
Idea Circles
Infra-Act: Sharing Perspectives
Question-Answer Relationships
Conclusion
Resources: Commercially Available Reading Programs
Glossary
Index