
Teaching with Literacy Programs
Equitable Instruction for All
Harvard Educational Publishing Group
Published on 3. October 2023
Book
Paperback/Softback
240 pages
978-1-68253-825-8 (ISBN)
Description
A step-by-step guide to developing equitable literacy instruction by adapting curriculum to support diverse learners.
In Teaching with Literacy Programs, Patricia A. Edwards, Kristen L. White, Laura J. Hopkins, and Ann M. Castle present a model that allows educators to address educational inequity through the critical and adaptive use of existing literacy curriculum materials. In this accessible work, they advise educators on ways to combine common classroom materials, such as basal readers and core reading programs, with instructional practices that provide high-quality, responsive instruction to all students.
Edwards, White, Hopkins, and Castle credit literacy instruction as a core part of overall educational equity, and they recognize the crucial role that educators play in translating materials into instruction that benefits all learners. Here they offer teacher education in support of this essential role, deftly guiding educators through a four-part development process, CARE, an acronym for cultivating critical consciousness, analyzing materials, reconstructing curricula, and evaluating instruction reflectively to advance equity. Built upon culturally relevant, sustaining, and antiracist pedagogy, CARE enables teachers to provide literacy instruction that meets the range of needs and performance levels in classrooms, supporting students in attaining academic achievement, cultural competence, and critical consciousness.
The approach outlined in this work, which can be put into immediate practice, helps educators to provide literacy instruction that builds on students' multiple literacies and reduces educational inequity.
In Teaching with Literacy Programs, Patricia A. Edwards, Kristen L. White, Laura J. Hopkins, and Ann M. Castle present a model that allows educators to address educational inequity through the critical and adaptive use of existing literacy curriculum materials. In this accessible work, they advise educators on ways to combine common classroom materials, such as basal readers and core reading programs, with instructional practices that provide high-quality, responsive instruction to all students.
Edwards, White, Hopkins, and Castle credit literacy instruction as a core part of overall educational equity, and they recognize the crucial role that educators play in translating materials into instruction that benefits all learners. Here they offer teacher education in support of this essential role, deftly guiding educators through a four-part development process, CARE, an acronym for cultivating critical consciousness, analyzing materials, reconstructing curricula, and evaluating instruction reflectively to advance equity. Built upon culturally relevant, sustaining, and antiracist pedagogy, CARE enables teachers to provide literacy instruction that meets the range of needs and performance levels in classrooms, supporting students in attaining academic achievement, cultural competence, and critical consciousness.
The approach outlined in this work, which can be put into immediate practice, helps educators to provide literacy instruction that builds on students' multiple literacies and reduces educational inequity.
Reviews / Votes
"Based upon their careful reading of the science of reading and the inequities in America's schools, these experienced educators have assembled a set of professional tools to help teachers transform even the most mundane of commercial language arts programs into culturally relevant, culturally sustaining, antiracist curricula. Educational alchemy at its best!" -P. David Pearson, Evelyn Lois Corey Emeritus Chair in Instructional Science, Berkeley School of Education, University of California, Berkeley"Edwards and her coauthors have written an important book. They propose the CARE framework as a road map to equitable literacy instruction. Empowering teachers to leverage students' funds of knowledge and literacy histories alongside the mandated literacy curriculum materials is at the core of this framework, and recommendations are provided for achieving this goal." -Pamela Mason, senior lecturer, Harvard Graduate School of Education
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 231 mm
Width: 160 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
340 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-68253-825-8 (9781682538258)
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

Patricia A. Edwards | Kristen L. White | Ann M. Castle
Teaching with Literacy Programs
Equitable Instruction for All
E-Book
09/2023
Harvard Education Press
€28.99
Available for download
Persons
Patricia A. Edwards is a member of the Reading Hall of Fame and a professor of language and literacy in the Teacher Education Department at Michigan State University. Edwards is a nationally and internationally recognized expert in family engagement and has written several articles and books on the topic.
Kristen L. White is an assistant professor of education at Northern Michigan University in Marquette, Michigan. Using a field-based approach, she instructs reading methods courses in a local elementary school where she and her students work closely with classroom teachers and children.
Laura J. Hopkins is the assistant director over elementary instruction and learning support at LIFE International School in Spain. She is a former teacher educator, elementary classroom teacher, and middle school reading specialist.
Ann M. Castle is an assistant professor of literacy education in the Department of Teacher Education at Michigan State University. Castle is a former elementary classroom teacher, Reading Recovery (R) teacher, literacy coach, and professional development consultant with three decades of teaching experience in PK-16 settings.
Kristen L. White is an assistant professor of education at Northern Michigan University in Marquette, Michigan. Using a field-based approach, she instructs reading methods courses in a local elementary school where she and her students work closely with classroom teachers and children.
Laura J. Hopkins is the assistant director over elementary instruction and learning support at LIFE International School in Spain. She is a former teacher educator, elementary classroom teacher, and middle school reading specialist.
Ann M. Castle is an assistant professor of literacy education in the Department of Teacher Education at Michigan State University. Castle is a former elementary classroom teacher, Reading Recovery (R) teacher, literacy coach, and professional development consultant with three decades of teaching experience in PK-16 settings.