An intensive course of study designed to help intermediate-grade students understand, respond to, and learn from nonfiction text.
Teacher reference resource containing comprehension lessons for teachers of children in the early years of school.
Includes: The Comprehension Toolkit - Second Edition The Comprehension Toolkit Trade Book Pack New: The Intermediate Trade Book Pack for Content Literacy Comprehension Intervention: Small Group Lessons for The Comprehension Toolkit ...
In Connecting Comprehension and Technology Steph and Anne invite teachers to join them in Katie Muhtaris' and Kristin Ziemke's classrooms to envision and embrace technology as a powerful tool for extending these Toolkit practices and ...
When readers monitor their comprehension, they keep track of their thinking while reading. They listen to the voice in their head that speaks to them as the read. They notice when the text makes sense or when it doesn''t.
"Scaffolding the primary comprehension toolkit for English language learners provides children learning English with the language and conceptual tool to read for understanding and express their thoughts and ideas"--Introduction.
Created to follow the Toolkit lesson, the Comprehensive Intervention small-group sessions narrow the instructional focus, concentrating on critical aspects of the Toolkit's lesson strategy to reinforce kids' understanding, step by step. -- ...
Revised ed. of: Comprehension & collaboration.
2003. Rabble Rousers: Twenty Women Who Made a Difference. New York, NY: Dutton. Herweck, Diana. 2013. On the Scene: A CSI's Life. Huntington Beach, CA: Teacher Created Materials. Hinton, S.E. 1982. The Outsiders. New York, NY: Viking.
"This book is intended for middle school and high school teachers of social studies, science, English, English-language development, and any other subject with challenging texts and classes with readers who struggle to understand them.
... V–O–T–E, Vote!” students chant as we march onto campus. College students turn, watch, listen, smile. Some shout out, “I voted!” which elicits cheers from the fifth- grade marchers. Past dorms and classrooms, we march, chant, and shout ...