List Price

$17.50

Textbook Details

  • ISBN:
    1571107800
  • ISBN-13:
    9781571107800
  • PUB. DATE:
    February 2009
  • PUBLISHER:
    Stenhouse Publishers
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Readicide: How Schools Are Killing Reading and What You Can Do about It by Kelly Gallagher, Richard Allington (Foreword by)

$17.50 List Price
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Customer Reviews

READ THIS BOOKby JDurham

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This book and *Building Student Literacy Through Sustained Silent Reading* changed my thinking about reading in high schools. It changed my thinking so much, in fact, our high school is starting a school-wide SSR program. Educators- our students should be reading books. This book taught me WHY we should create time during the day for SSR. It taught me WHY we should teach *the classics*. This book...

Important readby Anonymous

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This is an important read for all teachers K-12. If you struggle to get students to read, then you need to read Readicide.

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Readicide

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: February 2009
  • Publisher: Stenhouse Publishers
  • Sales Rank: 26,724

Synopsis

Read-i-cide n: The systematic killing of the love of reading, often exacerbated by the inane, mind-numbing practices found in schools.   Reading is dying in our schools. Educators are familiar with many of the factors that have contributed to the decline—poverty, second-language issues, and the ever-expanding choices of electronic entertainment. In this provocative new book, Kelly Gallagher suggests, however, that it is time to recognize a new and significant contributor to the death of reading: our schools.   In Readicide, Kelly argues that American schools are actively (though unwittingly) furthering the decline of reading. Specifically, he contends that the standard instructional practices used in most schools are killing reading by: ·         valuing the development of test-takers over the development of lifelong readers; ·         mandating breadth over depth in instruction; ·         requiring students to read difficult texts without proper instructional support; ·         insisting that students focus solely on academic texts; ·         drowning great books with sticky notes, double-entry journals, and marginalia; ·         ignoring the importance of developing recreational reading; and ·         losing sight of authentic instruction in the shadow of political pressures.   Kelly doesn’t settle for only identifyingthe problems. Readicide provides teachers, literacy coaches, and administrators with specific steps to reverse the downward spiral in reading—steps that will help prevent the loss of another generation of readers.