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Roser, Nancy – Language Arts, 2010
Roser discusses how both teachers and librarians, whom she calls the preservers of children's reading, should cling tightly to three essential practices to ensure that our children read more, read better, and read more widely. She argues we should: a) keep the classroom library viable; b) preserve, protect, and defend time for self-selected…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Instructional Materials, Classroom Environment, Teacher Influence
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Aukerman, Maren – Language Arts, 2008
Comprehension has often been conceptualized in ways that privilege either the "right" understanding of a text (comprehension-as-outcome), or getting to that "right" understanding (comprehension-as-procedure). This article makes a case that we should, instead, teach with an eye toward fostering comprehension-as-sense-making--a socially purposeful…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Discussion Groups, Figurative Language, Grade 4
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Mayher, John S.; Brause, Rita S. – Language Arts, 1983
Describes one teacher's systematic inquiry into the effectiveness of strategies to increase students' vocabularies. A research-type approach indicated that use of clarity statements and interchanges that encouraged connections to the students' own lives seemed more effective in helping students incorporate their understanding of concepts with…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Research, Elementary Education, Research Utilization
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Beck, Isabel L.; McKeown, Margaret G. – Language Arts, 1981
Describes a method for developing after-reading questions devised from a story map of the text's main events and ideas, both explicit and implicit, in order to guide comprehension, rather than just assess it. (HTH)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Elementary Education, Questioning Techniques, Reading Comprehension
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Siemens, Lisa – Language Arts, 1994
Discusses a classroom where children from many cultures use talk to share and discover the "big" questions in their lives and where the teacher discovers what the critical issues for her and her students really are. (RS)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Listening Skills, Primary Education
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Nathan, Ruth – Language Arts, 1995
Describes how one elementary school teacher uses three cornerstones to build a safe community for herself and her students: getting to know parents by asking herself to dinner; working with big ideas on long-lasting projects that grab students' attention and focus their drive to belong and to communicate with their classmates; and portfolios. (SR)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Cooperative Learning, Elementary Education
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Baskwill, Jane – Language Arts, 2006
"If at first you don't succeed, try, try again." This is a well-known adage with which many are familiar. Children learn it from an early age as they begin to walk, ride their bike, or tie their shoes. Adults repeatedly encourage children by saying, "You can do it! Give it a try! Just try harder!" However, when trying harder…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy, Student Attitudes, Self Concept
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Galda, Lee; And Others – Language Arts, 1995
Examines the roles and relationships involved as a first-grade teacher and her students built a classroom community that supported the children's acquisition of literacy. Shows how the teacher helped the children and how she got out of their way to allow them to take control of their own learning and curriculum. (SR)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, Literacy
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Wood, Katie – Language Arts, 1994
Notes that two texts were being read simultaneously as a teacher educator read aloud to other teachers in a summer seminar--Cynthia Rylant's "Missing May" and the experience of reading "Missing May." Notes that the teachers made meaning from both texts, working together to shape the teachers into a community because they had…
Descriptors: Adults, Classroom Communication, Elementary Education, Reading Aloud to Others
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Heath, Shirley Brice – Language Arts, 1983
Discusses the interrelationship of the language arts, and how both oral and written language help the learning process. Describes a classroom in which students' activities center around talking, and how the teacher participated as a researcher in ethnographic studies out of which came the motivation for this instructional approach. (HTH)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Research, Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Processes
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Wilson-Keenan, Jo-Anne; Solsken, Judith; Willett, Jerri – Language Arts, 2001
Illustrates how classroom talk that includes students, families, and teachers can create spaces in which students from diverse cultural backgrounds negotiate purposeful literacy practices. Presents two versions of a story of a family visit, the first version reflects an educator's understanding of the visit at the time and the second reflects the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Communication, Cooperation, Cultural Differences
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Bayer, Ann Shea – Language Arts, 1984
Describes a teacher inservice project intended to develop a language policy for using writing as a learning tool. Argues that the inservice context for teachers as learners is similar to that of the classroom and that the opportunity for talking should likewise be used for learning in the classroom. (HTH)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Content Area Writing, Inservice Teacher Education, Learning Processes
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Gavelek, James R.; Raphael, Taffy E. – Language Arts, 1996
Offers a theoretical perspective on how and why different ways of talking about text can be so important for helping readers develop and for learning to read literature. Details a model of language use within the classroom and considers implications of the model for the instruction and assessment of language and literacy. (SR)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Secondary Education, Language Usage
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Rosenbloom, Cindy Shultz – Language Arts, 1991
Discusses how young children, when given a chance in the classroom, display many and varied responses to literature. Shares, through the use of classroom experiences, how language and literature can guide the development of curriculum. (MG)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Classroom Communication, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education