
"Allington has rediscovered the gold from among the innumerable nuggets of reading research ore...he values the reader's specific interests and needs, but does not overwhelm."
" M. Priscilla Myers, Santa Clara University"
"The author uses realistic examples from teachers and classrooms to illustrate effective, meaningful reading instruction with struggling readers. A teacher teaching other teachers is a powerful model for reforming instruction."
" Jo Ann Dugan, Ohio University"
A "must-have reading resource" by nationally recognized scholar and author Richard Allington!
In his unique and expert voice, Allington delivers a concise and balanced introduction to reading remediation, intervention programs, and the topic of struggling readers in grades 2-9. The second edition of "What Really Matters for Struggling Readers" includes new research on vocabulary development and expanded research on fluency and comprehension. It continues to focus on helping teachers design reading remediation and intervention programs around well-established reality- and research-based components, framing them within the confines of the No Child Left Behind Act.
"What Really Matters for Struggling Readers'" easy-to-understand interpretations of research that support key principles of effective instructional design, along with its guidance for teachers on how to use a variety of best practices with children who are struggling readers, have made this a best-selling book!
Take a Peek inside the Second Edition New! Research on the role of choice in motivating reading activity and development New! A procedure for evaluating your school's successin meeting the needs of struggling readers New! At-a-glance chart that correlates reading research to Reading First New! Section on expanding vocabulary as a component of comprehension development Guidance on monitoring volume of reading and creating interventions that expand reading activity Instructional models and methods for fostering fluency Includes comprehension strategy instruction with a focus on developing higher-order comprehension and discussion
| alan lomax bernard widrow alistair mcalpine g a bradshaw surya narayan thakur | judith summers meyer b jackson karim yaghmour peter falai chen |