Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice

Author:   Thomas M. McCann ,  John V. Knapp
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9781475860245


Pages:   170
Publication Date:   15 December 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice


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Overview

In looking for an approach to teaching literature in high school, teachers largely fall back on the methods that they had experienced as students. These practices often involve a teacher assigning a complex work of literature and then assessing students’ reading through in-class recitations or quizzes. Teachers typically dominate the discourse and sometimes take charge of the task by reading aloud whole swathes of texts to their students. We know from our own experience as teachers, supervisors of teachers and student teachers, and researchers in the field that students are often bored with these approaches and teachers are frequently frustrated with learners’ unenthusiastic responses to the teachers’ favorite works of literature. There has to be a better way. This book offers approaches to engage students in productive procedures for reading complex texts and provides sample activities to allow learners to practice those procedures.

Full Product Details

Author:   Thomas M. McCann ,  John V. Knapp
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Dimensions:   Width: 16.10cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.70cm
Weight:   0.499kg
ISBN:  

9781475860245


ISBN 10:   1475860242
Pages:   170
Publication Date:   15 December 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Preface Introduction Chapter 1: Making Reading Literature Worthwhile Chapter 2: Options for Frontloading Encounters with Complex Texts Chapter 3: What We Notice and How We Construct Meaning Chapter 4: As Patterns Emerge: Joining Along and Questioning Why Chapter 5: Introducing Competing Critical Views Chapter 6: Responding to Literature in Discussion and Writing Chapter 7: Experiencing Literature as Performance Chapter 8: Fostering a Reading Habit Chapter 9: Connecting Texts in Coherent Inquiry Units Appendix: “Poor Alfred, Buried Three Times”

Reviews

Equally valuable to preservice teachers and practicing teachers, Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice answers why so many students hate to read and often don't seem to understand what they read. Arguing that success in an English classroom depends on the rich interaction between teacher, students, and text, McCann and Knapp propose that students benefit from the discovery and explicit acknowledgement of the rules of reading employed by mature readers and teachers. If students are given the chance to generate and practice procedures about how-to-read, they can successfully understand and respond in deeper ways to texts drawn from popular culture, young adult literature, and the classics. Suggested specific activities grounded in a practiced theoretical frame centered on genuine inquiry and authentic discussion makes this book essential reading. In Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice, McCann and Knapp provide new and experienced teachers a practical and engaging alternative to the assign and assess method of instruction that can limit a teacher's practice and diminish a student's love of reading. The ready-to-use activities with scaffolded skill sequences and examples of student work offer teachers a template to design coherent and relevant curriculum that will motivate students to grow as readers. This book offers a guaranteed and viable way to empower students to discover, refine, and employ the strategies that experts use to make meaning of literature. Above all, teachers will value the authors' principled approach to instruction which will make the experience of English class a delight. With their Teaching Literature in High School, McCann and Knapp astutely observe that students need preparation for frequent encounters with challenging texts in order to develop higher-level thinking skills and to experience works of literature with confidence. Many elements of the book, and Chapter Four in particular, will benefit college faculty who assign complex texts and recognize the need to prepare students to unpack dense works of literature. As the authors argue, practice with noticing key text features and reflecting on their implications prompts metacognition, promoting inquiry into how a narrative structure, for example, shapes a reader's own understanding of the text. I judge the book to be an indispensable resource for high school and college faculty who are reconsidering their pedagogical approach to make learning more enjoyable and meaningful. The ideas and activities articulated in this volume by McCann and Knapp provide alternatives to the routine readings and assessments teachers usually assign. Teachers need resources and options to engage and motivate students to read critically and reflect on simple and/or complex texts. Students in turn need practice to become skilled, reflective, responsive, and avid readers. The strategies considered often reflect the discourse of content area literacy, with a focus on critical, constructive thinking. Each chapter includes a review of the relevant information and perspectives and presents questions for readers' response. The final chapter's argument for inquiry units is compelling, and readers will appreciate the steps and sample sequence based on the theme of justice. Recommended. Advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and professionals.


"Equally valuable to preservice teachers and practicing teachers, Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice answers why so many students hate to read and often don't seem to understand what they read. Arguing that success in an English classroom depends on the rich interaction between teacher, students, and text, McCann and Knapp propose that students benefit from the discovery and explicit acknowledgement of the rules of reading employed by mature readers and teachers. If students are given the chance to generate and practice procedures about how-to-read, they can successfully understand and respond in deeper ways to texts drawn from popular culture, young adult literature, and the classics. Suggested specific activities grounded in a practiced theoretical frame centered on genuine inquiry and authentic discussion makes this book essential reading. --Dianne Chambers, Professor of English, Elmhurst University, Elmhurst, Illinois In Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice, McCann and Knapp provide new and experienced teachers a practical and engaging alternative to the assign and assess method of instruction that can limit a teacher's practice and diminish a student's love of reading. The ready-to-use activities with scaffolded skill sequences and examples of student work offer teachers a template to design coherent and relevant curriculum that will motivate students to grow as readers. This book offersa guaranteed and viable way to empower students to discover, refine, and employ the strategies that experts use to make meaning of literature. Above all, teachers will value the authors' principled approach to instruction which will make the experience of English class a delight. --Dawn Forde, English Teacher, Adlai E. Stevenson High School, Lincolnshire, Illinois The ideas and activities articulated in this volume by McCann and Knapp provide alternatives to the routine readings and assessments teachers usually assign. Teachers need resources and options to engage and motivate students to read critically and reflect on simple and/or complex texts. Students in turn need practice to become skilled, reflective, responsive, and avid readers. The strategies considered often reflect the discourse of content area literacy, with a focus on critical, constructive thinking. Each chapter includes a review of the relevant information and perspectives and presents questions for readers' response. The final chapter's argument for inquiry units is compelling, and readers will appreciate the steps and sample sequence based on the theme of justice. Recommended. Advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and professionals. -- ""Choice Reviews"" With their Teaching Literature in High School, McCann and Knapp astutely observe that students need preparation for frequent encounters with challenging texts in order to develop higher-level thinking skills and to experience works of literature with confidence. Many elements of the book, and Chapter Four in particular, will benefit college faculty who assign complex texts and recognize the need to prepare students to unpack dense works of literature. As the authors argue, practice with noticing key text features and reflecting on their implications prompts metacognition, promoting inquiry into how a narrative structure, for example, shapes a reader's own understanding of the text. I judge the book to be an indispensable resource for high school and college faculty who are reconsidering their pedagogical approach to make learning more enjoyable and meaningful. --Melina Martin, Associate Professor of English, College of DuPage, Illinois Equally valuable to preservice teachers and practicing teachers, Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice answers why so many students hate to read and often don't seem to understand what they read. Arguing that success in an English classroom depends on the rich interaction between teacher, students, and text, McCann and Knapp propose that students benefit from the discovery and explicit acknowledgement of the rules of reading employed by mature readers and teachers. If students are given the chance to generate and practice procedures about how-to-read, they can successfully understand and respond in deeper ways to texts drawn from popular culture, young adult literature, and the classics. Suggested specific activities grounded in a practiced theoretical frame centered on genuine inquiry and authentic discussion makes this book essential reading. In Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice, McCann and Knapp provide new and experienced teachers a practical and engaging alternative to the assign and assess method of instruction that can limit a teacher's practice and diminish a student's love of reading. The ready-to-use activities with scaffolded skill sequences and examples of student work offer teachers a template to design coherent and relevant curriculum that will motivate students to grow as readers. This book offersa guaranteed and viable way to empower students to discover, refine, and employ the strategies that experts use to make meaning of literature. Above all, teachers will value the authors' principled approach to instruction which will make the experience of English class a delight. The ideas and activities articulated in this volume by McCann and Knapp provide alternatives to the routine readings and assessments teachers usually assign. Teachers need resources and options to engage and motivate students to read critically and reflect on simple and/or complex texts. Students in turn need practice to become skilled, reflective, responsive, and avid readers. The strategies considered often reflect the discourse of content area literacy, with a focus on critical, constructive thinking. Each chapter includes a review of the relevant information and perspectives and presents questions for readers' response. The final chapter's argument for inquiry units is compelling, and readers will appreciate the steps and sample sequence based on the theme of justice. Recommended. Advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and professionals. With their Teaching Literature in High School, McCann and Knapp astutely observe that students need preparation for frequent encounters with challenging texts in order to develop higher-level thinking skills and to experience works of literature with confidence. Many elements of the book, and Chapter Four in particular, will benefit college faculty who assign complex texts and recognize the need to prepare students to unpack dense works of literature. As the authors argue, practice with noticing key text features and reflecting on their implications prompts metacognition, promoting inquiry into how a narrative structure, for example, shapes a reader's own understanding of the text. I judge the book to be an indispensable resource for high school and college faculty who are reconsidering their pedagogical approach to make learning more enjoyable and meaningful."


Equally valuable to preservice teachers and practicing teachers, Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice answers why so many students hate to read and often don't seem to understand what they read. Arguing that success in an English classroom depends on the rich interaction between teacher, students, and text, McCann and Knapp propose that students benefit from the discovery and explicit acknowledgement of the rules of reading employed by mature readers and teachers. If students are given the chance to generate and practice procedures about how-to-read, they can successfully understand and respond in deeper ways to texts drawn from popular culture, young adult literature, and the classics. Suggested specific activities grounded in a practiced theoretical frame centered on genuine inquiry and authentic discussion makes this book essential reading. --Dianne Chambers, Professor of English, Elmhurst University, Elmhurst, Illinois In Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice, McCann and Knapp provide new and experienced teachers a practical and engaging alternative to the assign and assess method of instruction that can limit a teacher's practice and diminish a student's love of reading. The ready-to-use activities with scaffolded skill sequences and examples of student work offer teachers a template to design coherent and relevant curriculum that will motivate students to grow as readers. This book offersa guaranteed and viable way to empower students to discover, refine, and employ the strategies that experts use to make meaning of literature. Above all, teachers will value the authors' principled approach to instruction which will make the experience of English class a delight. --Dawn Forde, English Teacher, Adlai E. Stevenson High School, Lincolnshire, Illinois The ideas and activities articulated in this volume by McCann and Knapp provide alternatives to the routine readings and assessments teachers usually assign. Teachers need resources and options to engage and motivate students to read critically and reflect on simple and/or complex texts. Students in turn need practice to become skilled, reflective, responsive, and avid readers. The strategies considered often reflect the discourse of content area literacy, with a focus on critical, constructive thinking. Each chapter includes a review of the relevant information and perspectives and presents questions for readers' response. The final chapter's argument for inquiry units is compelling, and readers will appreciate the steps and sample sequence based on the theme of justice. Recommended. Advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and professionals. -- ""Choice Reviews"" With their Teaching Literature in High School, McCann and Knapp astutely observe that students need preparation for frequent encounters with challenging texts in order to develop higher-level thinking skills and to experience works of literature with confidence. Many elements of the book, and Chapter Four in particular, will benefit college faculty who assign complex texts and recognize the need to prepare students to unpack dense works of literature. As the authors argue, practice with noticing key text features and reflecting on their implications prompts metacognition, promoting inquiry into how a narrative structure, for example, shapes a reader's own understanding of the text. I judge the book to be an indispensable resource for high school and college faculty who are reconsidering their pedagogical approach to make learning more enjoyable and meaningful. --Melina Martin, Associate Professor of English, College of DuPage, Illinois


Equally valuable to preservice teachers and practicing teachers, Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice answers why so many students hate to read and often don't seem to understand what they read. Arguing that success in an English classroom depends on the rich interaction between teacher, students, and text, McCann and Knapp propose that students benefit from the discovery and explicit acknowledgement of the rules of reading employed by mature readers and teachers. If students are given the chance to generate and practice procedures about how-to-read, they can successfully understand and respond in deeper ways to texts drawn from popular culture, young adult literature, and the classics. Suggested specific activities grounded in a practiced theoretical frame centered on genuine inquiry and authentic discussion makes this book essential reading.--Dianne Chambers, Professor of English, Elmhurst University, Elmhurst, Illinois With their Teaching Literature in High School, McCann and Knapp astutely observe that students need preparation for frequent encounters with challenging texts in order to develop higher-level thinking skills and to experience works of literature with confidence. Many elements of the book, and Chapter Four in particular, will benefit college faculty who assign complex texts and recognize the need to prepare students to unpack dense works of literature. As the authors argue, practice with noticing key text features and reflecting on their implications prompts metacognition, promoting inquiry into how a narrative structure, for example, shapes a reader's own understanding of the text. I judge the book to be an indispensable resource for high school and college faculty who are reconsidering their pedagogical approach to make learning more enjoyable and meaningful.--Melina Martin, Associate Professor of English, College of DuPage, Illinois In Teaching Literature in High School: Principles into Purposeful Practice, McCann and Knapp provide new and experienced teachers a practical and engaging alternative to the assign and assess method of instruction that can limit a teacher's practice and diminish a student's love of reading. The ready-to-use activities with scaffolded skill sequences and examples of student work offer teachers a template to design coherent and relevant curriculum that will motivate students to grow as readers. This book offers a guaranteed and viable way to empower students to discover, refine, and employ the strategies that experts use to make meaning of literature. Above all, teachers will value the authors' principled approach to instruction which will make the experience of English class a delight.--Dawn Forde, English Teacher, Adlai E. Stevenson High School, Lincolnshire, Illinois


Author Information

Thomas M. McCann is a professor of English at Northern Illinois University, where he contributes to the teacher licensure program. His books include Transforming Talk into Text (Teachers College Press), Raise Your Voices: Inquiry, Discussion, and Literacy Learning, Learning to Enjoy Literature (Rowman & Littlefield), and Teaching on Solid Ground, with John Knapp (Guilford Press). John V. Knapp is emeritus Professor of English at Northern Illinois University, and, continuing since 2007, the editor of the literary journal, Style. Knapp is the author and/or editor of several other books, including Learning to Enjoy Literature (2021), Striking at the Joints: Contemporary Psychology and Literary Criticism (1995); Learning from Scant Beginnings: English Professor Expertise (2008), and Critical Insights: Family (2013).

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