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Book Info | | | enlarge picture
| Nonfiction Matters: Reading, Writing, and Research in Grades 3-8 | | Author: | Stephanie Harvey | ISBN: | 1571100725 | Format: | Handover | Publish Date: | June, 2005 | | | | | | | | | Book Review | | |
From the Back Cover When we open the gates to nonfiction inquiry, we open our thinking and expect the unexpected, making reading discoveries, research discoveries, and writing discoveries on our way. Nonfiction Matters offers teachers the tools to help students explore nonfiction and dig deep to reach more complete understanding of the real world and report these insights in a compelling manner. Stephanie Harvey shows how students can read expository text, engage in research, and write authentic nonfiction that is captivating, visual, and full of voice. The inquiry projects she describes require in-depth learning: topic selection, question development, research exploration, reading for content, organization, synthesis, writing to convey meaning, and presenting findings - all skills that develop independent thinkers who know how to make decisions, solve problems, and apply their knowledge insightfully. Full of practical suggestions to help you bring nonfiction into your curriculum, Nonfiction Matters: - presents strategies for understanding expository text and conducting meaningful research; - offers ideas for organizing and writing accurate, effective nonfiction from idea to finished presentation; - advances the importance of teacher modeling and guided practice in instructional delivery; - provides a list of inquiry tools and resources-both print and electronic; - suggests ways to facilitate project-based learning and assess the projects as they develop; - includes bibliographies of nonfiction children's books by subject and genre and lists of recommended magazines. Why is nonfiction almost a guaranteed success? The key to teaching with nonfiction is passion, for children are passionate inquirers, and nonfiction fuels their curiosity and their demand for knowledge and understanding of the world.
About the Author Stephanie Harvey has spent her career teaching and learning about reading and writing, as an elementary and special education teacher and now as a private consultant and a staff developer for the Denver-based Public Education and Business Coalition. She works with teachers in inner-city, suburban, and rural settings, conducting demonstration lessons, leading workshops, facilitating study groups, teaching courses, and coordinating literacy projects. Stephanie lives with her family in Denver, and whenever there's time, she heads for the hills to ski that Colorado powder.
Nonfiction Matters: Reading, Writing, and Research in Grades 3-8 FROM THE PUBLISHER When we open the gates to nonfiction inquiry, we open our thinking and expect the unexpected, making reading discoveries, research discoveries, and writing discoveries on our way. Nonfiction Matters offers teachers the tools to help students explore nonfiction and dig deep to reach more complete understanding of the real world and report these insights in a compelling manner.
Stephanie Harvey shows how students can read expository text, engage in research, and write authentic nonfiction that is captivating, visual, and full of voice. The inquiry projects she describes require in-depth learning: topic selection, question development, research exploration, reading for content, organization, synthesis, writing to convey meaning, and presenting findings - all skills that develop independent thinkers who know how to make decisions, solve problems, and apply their knowledge insightfully.
Full of practical suggestions to help you bring nonfiction into your curriculum, Nonfiction Matters:
presents strategies for understanding expository text and conducting meaningful research;
offers ideas for organizing and writing accurate, effective nonfiction from idea to finished presentation;
advances the importance of teacher modeling and guided practice in instructional delivery;
provides a list of inquiry tools and resources-both print and electronic;
suggests ways to facilitate project-based learning and assess the projects as they develop;
includes bibliographies of nonfiction children's books by subject and genre and lists of recommended magazines.
Why is nonfiction almost a guaranteed success? The key to teaching with nonfiction is passion, for children are passionate inquirers, and nonfiction fuels their curiosity and their demand for knowledge and understanding of the world.
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