Reading Actively in Middle Grade Social Studies: Teachers and Students in Action
By (Author) Don K. Philpot
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
9th August 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Teaching of a specific subject
Educational: First / native language: Reading and writing skills
418.40712
Paperback
208
Width 151mm, Height 224mm, Spine 15mm
322g
Middle grade students can learn a great deal about themselves and their world by reading informative texts in social studies courses. These texts will focus on important topics in history, geography, civics, government, and economics and offer students a range of perspectives on past and present social events. But reading is a complex act, and most students need specific reading-related support to understand assigned texts in middle grade social studies courses.
This book focuses on the cyclical nature of reading, the actions proficient readers engage in to understand social studies textbooks and other informational texts, and the instructional support that teachers can provide to enhance middle grade students learning of social studies content through reading. Three associated questions will be addressed in this book:
What actions do proficient readers engage in to understand assigned course texts
What do these actions entail, and how do they relate to each other
What teacher-mediated practices best support middle grade students development as proficient readers and enhance their learning of course content through reading
As a director of social studies programs in teacher education for almost 20 years, it is very promising to read practical pedagogical pieces of work like Don K. Philpot's Reading Actively in Middle Grades Social Stuides: Teachers and Students in Action. Philpot is able to take (action!) on the extremely difficult and daunting task of authentically and authoritatively blending the social studies with an everyday subject like reading, turning it into a compelling read that I shall recommend to my fellow colleagues. -- Jeffrey M. Hawkins, EdD, Director of Social Studies Education; Associate Professor of Urban Education, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
If youre a middle school social studies teacher looking for instructional ideas that support students as they read to learn in your discipline, this is the text for you. Philpots classroom examples illustrate the reading process in action by demonstrating how to engage student interest, how to address student struggles, and how to promote learning for all, as they participate in whole class and small group instructional contexts. -- Diane Lapp, EdD, Distinguished Professor of Education, San Diego State University and Instructional Coach, Health Sciences High & Middle College
Middle level educators realize the need to connect reading strategies and thinking across disciplines. This text not only provides theory and strategies with specific examples based on social studies teachers' work with content standards, there is also a deep connection to planning and assessing student learning.
Every social studies teacher needs both literacy and strategies for presenting social studies content. Philpot shares exemplary samples, rationales, and tools for planning engaging lessons. This text bridges social studies planning with a thorough connection to reading practices that enhance deeper thinking.
I loved how this book integrates practical reading theory and strategies with social studies lessons. In addition, the focus on intentional, rich lesson planning provides students with multiple opportunities to engage in social studies content blends what we know about the learning needs of young adolescents. Philpot gives social studies teachers multiple tools to engage young adolescents.
Don K. Philpot is a teacher, teacher educator, and writer. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on the topics of instructional methodologies, content area reading, reading and writing instruction, and childrens literature in Pennsylvania.