2018 End-of-Year Holiday Book Sale
Catch up on your professional reading this winter!
The NCTE Holiday Sale has ended, but be sure to check out the titles available at the NCTE store.–
LITERACY
Making Curriculum Pop: Developing Literacies in All Content Areas
Pam Goble and Ryan R. Goble
This book offers secondary teachers in all content areas a flexible, interdisciplinary approach to integrate all types of literacies into their curriculum.
Doing and Making Authentic Literacies
Linda Denstaedt, Laura Jane Roop, and Stephen Best
This book features educators in construction trades, English, math, and multidisciplinary teams who have created empowering disciplinary classrooms and projects that allow students to gain new identities as makers and doers. Principles in Practice imprint
Entering the Conversations: Practicing Literacy in the Disciplines
Patricia Lambert Stock, Trace Schillinger, and Andrew Stock
Learn how students at all levels of instruction can learn both subject matter and the discipline-specific practices for reading and writing about that subject matter. Principles in Practice imprint
Teacher Inquiry in Literacy Workshops: Forging Relationships through Reggio-Inspired Practice
Editor: Judith Lysaker
The challenges and rewards of early childhood education come alive in this collection of narratives by a community of nascent teacher-researchers who share their investigations of enacting literacy workshops in Reggio-inspired classrooms.
Copyright Clarity: How Fair Use Supports Digital Learning
Renee Hobbs
In this jargon-free guide, Renee Hobbs clarifies principles for applying copyright law to 21st-century education, discusses what is permissible in the classroom, and explores the fair use of digital materials.
Learning to Read the Numbers: Integrating Critical Literacy and Critical Numeracy in K-8 Classrooms
Phyllis Whitin and David Whitin
Phyllis and David Whitin show how critical readers dig beneath the surface of data to understand how numbers are constructed by authors to portray a certain version of reality.
Reading and Writing and Teens: A Parent’s Guide to Adolescent Literacy
Cathy Fleischer
Cathy Fleischer, an English professor and mother of teenagers, helps navigate through the sometimes overwhelming messages you hear about adolescents and literacy.
Adolescent Literacy at Risk? The Impact of Standards
Rebecca Bowers Sipe
Rebecca Bowers Sipe offers an in-depth look at the world of standards. Throughout the book, she raises questions that are significant to teachers and administrators who are concerned about the direction the standards movement has taken. Principles in Practice imprint
Secondary School Literacy: What Research Reveals for Classroom Practice
Editors: Leslie Rush, A. Jonathan Eakle, and Allen Berger
This collection informs high school teachers and administrators about current research in secondary school literacy, as well as providing information about how research findings might be applied in secondary school settings.
Literacy as Social Practice: Primary Voices K-6
Editors: Jerome C. Harste, Vivian Vasquez, Kathryn A. Egawa and Richard D. Thompson
The editors discuss the transformative possibilities of literacy through a collection of 12 articles originally published in Primary Voices K-6.
When Stories Come to School: Telling, Writing, and Performing Stories in the Early Childhood Classroom
Patsy Cooper
Cooper offers preschool and kindergarten teachers a natural way to help young children begin to read and write: placing stories at the very center of the early childhood curriculum.
LANGUAGE
Literacies, the Arts, and Multimodality
Peggy Albers and Jennifer Sanders
The chapters of this collection present a broad range of research and practice that demonstrates effective integration of study in the arts, multimodality, and new literacies into K-12 English language arts classrooms.
Valuing Language Study: Inquiry into Language for Elementary and Middle Schools
Yetta Goodman
This book offers teachers a rich language studies curriculum they can adapt to the needs of their elementary and middle school students.
"It's Our World Too": Socially Responsive Learners in Middle School Language Arts
Beverly Busching and Betty Ann Slesinger
This book is a valuable resource for middle school teachers who want to use significant social issues such as race, class, and poverty to invigorate their teaching of literacy and communication skills through student inquiry and collaborative learning.
Language Ideologies: Critical Perspectives on the Official English Movement, Volume 1
Editors: Roseann Dueñas González and Ildkió Melis
The contributors to this first of two volumes come from varying backgrounds and together explore the political, legislative, social, and educational implications of language ideologies.
So Much to Say: Adolescents, Bilingualism, & ESL in the Secondary School
Editors: Christian Faltis and Paula Wolfe
This ground-breaking volume is the first to bring together new research on adolescent learners of English within the secondary school context. Some of the most influential and well-known specialists in the field of language education share their research and knowledge about a wide range of issues in bilingualism and ESL.
Metaphorical Ways of Knowing: The Imaginative Nature of Thought and Expression
Sharon L. Pugh, Jean Wolph Hicks, and Marcia Davis
Theory and practical classroom applications meet in this book, linking activities and resources to current classroom concerns, including multiculturalism and imagination in reading and writing.
The Language of Interpretation: Patterns of Discourse in Discussions of Literature
Peter Smagorinsky, Michael W. Smith, and James D. Marshall
Drawing on interviews and on the actual language that readers use to interpret and respond to literary texts, the researchers examine the conventions that shape talk about literature in large groups, small groups, and adult book clubs.
POETRY
Another Jar of Tiny Stars: Poems by More NCTE Award-Winning Poets
Editors: Bernice E. Cullinan and Deborah Wooten
This expanded edition of A Jar of Tiny Stars includes the work of five winners (1997–2009) of NCTE’s Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children.
Wordplaygrounds: Reading, Writing, and Performing Poetry in the English Classroom
John S. O’Connor
O’Connor offers new approaches to teaching poetry in middle and high school with more than 25 writing activities that can constitute an entire course or work as individual lessons.
I Heard a Bluebird Sing: Children Select Their Favorite Poems by Aileen Fisher
Editor: Bernice E. Cullinan
Young readers from across the country have chosen their favorite Aileen Fisher poems in this marvelous collection.
A Jar of Tiny Stars: Poems by NCTE Award-Winning Poets
Editor: Bernice E. Cullinan
This book celebrates ten of the brightest “stars” in children’s poetry, all of whom are recipients of NCTE’s Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children.
ASSESSMENT & STANDARDS
Beyond Standardized Truth: Improving Teaching and Learning through Inquiry-Based Reading Assessment
Scott Filkins
Scott Filkins brings us into his and colleagues’ classrooms to demonstrate how high school teachers across the disciplines can engage in inquiry-based reading assessment to support student learning. Principles in Practice imprint
Our Better Judgment: Teacher Leadership for Writing Assessment
Chris Gallagher and Eric Turley
Gallagher and Turley argue for moving assessment to the center of our professional practice, especially if we approach writing assessment through an inquiry framework that allows us to collaborate with students, other teachers, and community members. Principles in Practice imprint
Supporting Students in a Time of Core Standards: English Language Arts, Grades 3-5
Jeff Williams with Elizabeth Homan and Sarah Swofford
The heart of the book features vignettes of six grade 3–5 classroom teachers from a diverse range of schools, sharing their innovative lesson ideas and showing how they address the CCSS in concert with the deliberate, student-centered teaching and learning choices they already make.
Supporting Students in a Time of Core Standards: English Language Arts, Grades 6-8
Tonya Perry with Rebecca Manery
This book takes you into the classrooms of middle school and junior high teachers who are meeting the demands of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) while staying true to their students and to their own knowledge of what constitutes effective, student-centered teaching.
Supporting Students in a Time of Core Standards: English Language Arts, Grades 9-12
Sarah Brown Wessling with Crystal VanKooten and Danielle Lillge
This book reinforces a focus on student learning by demonstrating ways of addressing the Common Core State Standards in grades 9-12 while also adhering to NCTE principles of effective teaching.
Standards for the Assessment of Reading and Writing, Revised Edition
With this updated document, NCTE and IRA reaffirm their position that the primary purpose of assessment must be to improve teaching and learning for all students. Eleven core standards are presented and explained, and a helpful glossary is included.
Standards for the English Language Arts
Designed to prepare all K–12 students for the increasing literacy demands of today and tomorrow, Standards for the English Language Arts presents a vision of literacy education that encompasses the use of print, oral, and visual language and addresses six interrelated English language arts: reading, writing, speaking, listening, viewing, and visually representing.
Portfolios in the Writing Classroom: An Introduction
Editor: Kathleen Blake Yancey
Classroom teachers discuss ways to introduce portfolios into the classroom, different models and assessment practices for portfolio projects, and new kinds of collaboration among students and teachers.
PROFESSIONAL ISSUES
Teaching Literacy for Love and Wisdom: Being the Book and Being the Change
Jeffrey D. Wilhelm and Bruce Novak
Wilhelm and Novak challenge business as usual in the language arts. They call for nothing short of a revolution in our understanding of the aims and methods of the English classroom, showing what English can do for democratic life, inside and outside of classrooms.
Building the English Classroom: Foundations, Support, Success
Bruce Penniman
Writing for English teachers who are overworked and overwhelmed, Bruce Penniman offers personal reflections, classroom anecdotes, teaching materials, and student work while presenting strategies for managing the demands of the secondary English classroom.
Becoming Teammates: Teachers and Families as Literacy Partners
Charlene Klassen Endrizzi
Becoming Teammates: Teachers and Families as Literacy Partners describes a three-phase plan for elementary-level teachers to develop literacy partnerships with children’s families.
Rationales for Challenged Books, Volume 2 (CD)
Rationales for Challenged Books, Volume 2, is a CD-ROM that includes over 100 rationales for commonly taught works to help teachers support their use in the classroom and, if necessary, counter challenges.
What Difference Does Difference Make? Teacher Reflections on Diversity, Literacy, and the Urban Primary School
Anne Haas Dyson
Elementary school teachers share stories of teaching and learning, testifying to the teachers’ ability to engage young people in active learning—and that difference does make a difference.
Primary Voices K - 6: The Second-Year Collection
The Second-Year Collection covers the 1994–95 school year and offers insights into “Generative Curriculum,” “Conflict Resolution,” Talking and Learning in Classrooms,” and “Children’s Literature for all.”
Preserving Intellectual Freedom: Fighting Censorship in Our Schools
Jean E. Brown
Through candid personal examples, discussion of philosophical and psychological considerations, and legal precedents, the authors offer insight into how censorship can come about, its impact and repercussions, and the ways it might be fought.
READING & WRITING
Writing in the Dialogical Classroom: Students and Teachers Responding to the Texts of Their Lives
Bob Fecho
Drawing on NCTE Beliefs about the Teaching of Writing, and focusing on adolescent learners, Bob Fecho argues that teachers need to develop writing experiences that are reflective across time in order to foster even deeper explorations of subject matter. Principles in Practice imprint
Learning to Write for Readers: Using Brain-Based Strategies
John T. Crow
This brain-based approach to writing instruction will help you build from the tremendous storehouse of knowledge students already possess about language to help them learn what they need to know about writing.
Catching Tigers in Red Weather: Imaginative Writing and Student Choice in High School
Judith Rowe Michaels
Teacher-poet Judith Rowe Michaels describes how she refocused her ninth-grade English course to help students explore writing—their own and the assigned literature—as an art form with the same potential for creativity as, say, Web design, filmmaking, or music.
College Credit for Writing in High School: The "Taking Care of" Business
Editors: Kristine Hansen and Christine Farris
This collection explores various options that students have for “taking care of” the first-year college writing requirement, including AP tests, concurrent enrollment/dual-credit courses, the International Baccalaureate diploma, and early college high schools.
The Vocabulary Book: Learning and Instruction
Michael F. Graves
Graves presents a comprehensive plan for vocabulary instruction from kindergarten through high school—one broad enough to instruct students with small vocabularies, exceptional vocabularies, and every child in between.
Teaching Reading in Middle School
Laura Robb
This book presents a strategic approach to teaching reading that improves comprehension and thinking.
Go Public! Encouraging Student Writers to Publish
Susanne Rubenstein
Intended for middle and high school teachers, Go Public! offers specific writing ideas and classroom activities to help students develop the confidence and ability to publish in a wide market.
Social Worlds of Children Learning to Write in an Urban Primary School
Anne Haas Dyson
In this book, Dyson aims to provide elementary and early childhood professionals with “a better understanding of the social work of childhood, the ways that social work shapes both oral and written composing, and ways of creating classroom crossroads where worlds can come together and open up to new places.”
The Writing Process in Action: A Handbook for Teachers
Jackie Proett and Kent Gill
This book provides myriad ways to put the writing process into action in the classroom and, more importantly, in students’ lives beyond the limited student/teacher interaction.
COLLEGE STUDIES
Students' Right to Their Own Language: A Critical Sourcebook
Editors: Staci Perryman-Clark, David Kirkland, and Austin Jackson
This critical sourcebook revisits the complexities of one of the most controversial statements in CCCC history.
Undergraduate Research in English Studies
Editors: Laurie Grobman and Joyce Kinkead
Editors Laurie Grobman and Joyce Kinkead offer a groundbreaking collection of essays that aims to mobilize the profession of English studies to further participate in undergraduate research, which in the past had been reserved for scientific fields.
Engaging Audience: Writing in an Age of New Literacies
Editors: Angela Gonzalez, Elizabeth Weiser, and Brian Fehler
This collection of essays about audience awareness from professionals in the English, public relations, and writing fields is based on the work of scholars Lisa Ede and Andrea Lunsford.
Multicultural Hybridity: Transforming American Literary Scholarship and Pedagogy
Laurie Grobman
Grobman argues that texts by writers of color are multiply inflected hybrids that blur, but do not erase, cultural difference, thereby allowing for multiple intersections of meaning.
Don't Call It That: The Composition Practicum
Editor: Sid Dobrin
This provocative collection of original essays addresses the efforts of comp programs to clarify that introductory graduate-level comp courses are more than “how-to-teach-writing” courses.
Selected Essays of Robert J. Connors
Editors: Lisa Ede and Andrea A. Lunsford
This chronological collection provides a representative sample of Robert J. Connors’s most significant work throughout his twenty-year career.
Radical Departures: Composition and Progressive Pedagogy
Chris Gallagher
Persuasively written and thoroughly researched, Radical Departures addresses some big questions: the position of Composition in the academy and its growth as a discipline; the current political climate, with its calls for standardized testing and accountability; the uneasy relationships between faculty in English and English education departments; and the (lack of) cooperation between postsecondary compositionists and P–12 language arts teachers.
Moving a Mountain: Transforming the Role of Contingent Faculty in Composition Studies and Higher Education
Editors: Eileen Schell and Patricia Lambert Stock
How can the academy improve the working conditions of those who teach most of the core curriculum in higher education today: part-time and non-tenure-track faculty? Contributors focus on the field of composition as they address this question in case studies, local narratives, and analyses of models for ethical employment practices.
Persons in Process: Four Stories of Writing and Personal Development in College
Anne Herrington and Marcia Curtis
The authors provide insight into the ways that students’ academic and personal uses of writing reflect each other, as well as ways that, in responding to students’ writing, teachers can help as well as hinder these interrelated developmental processes.
Mina P. Shaughnessy: Her Life and Work
Jane Maher
This book is a biography of a leading figure in the field of basic writing and a devoted advocate of Open Admissions.
A Kind of Passport: A Basic Writing Adjunct Program and the Challenge of Student Diversity
Anne DiPardo
A Kind of Passport offers a finely textured portrait of one basic writing program’s effort to meet the needs of ethnically underrepresented and academically underprepared students.
Signifying as a Scaffold for Literary Interpretation: The Pedagogical Implications of an African American Discourse Genre
Carol D. Lee
Finding ways to build on the language abilities students of diverse cultures bring to school, this book recounts an experiment in helping urban African American high school students to interpret literature by drawing on their own rich oral tradition of “signifying.”
LITERATURE
Reading Shakespeare Film First
Mary Ellen Dakin
In Reading Shakespeare Film First, Mary Ellen Dakin asserts that we need to read Shakespeare in triplicate—as the stuff of transformative literature, theater, and film. The potential for the mutual reinforcement and transfer of twenty-first-century literacy skills between text and film is too promising for classroom teachers to overlook.
Engaging American Novels: Lessons from the Classroom
Editors: Joseph O. Milner and Carol A. Pope
This collection focuses on ten frequently taught American novels, both classic and contemporary, that can help promote student engagement.
A Master Class in Children’s Literature: Trends and Issues in an Evolving Field
Editors: April Whatley Bedford and Lettie K. Albright
This collection discusses contemporary issues in children’s literature and offers suggestions, strategies, and resources for teacher educators, teachers, and librarians.
The Fiction of Toni Morrison: Reading and Writing on Race, Culture, and Identity
Editor: Jami Carlacio
A collection of essays offering new and experienced teacher-scholars alternative ways to approach Toni Morrison’s fiction and prose in the classroom, focusing on the history of racism and identity and cultural politics.
Judith Ortiz Cofer in the Classroom: A Woman in Front of the Sun
Carol Jago
Carol Jago offers ways to teach the works of Judith Ortiz Cofer in the high school English classroom.
Literature, Literacy, and Comprehension Strategies in the Elementary School
Joy F. Moss
Moss focuses on literature units structured around read-aloud/think-aloud group sessions in which students collaborate to construct meaning.
Raymond Carver in the Classroom: "A Small, Good Thing"
Susanne Rubenstein
Rubenstein offers specific, classroom-tested strategies for teaching Raymond Carver’s short stories and poems in the high school English classroom.
Literature in the Secondary School: Studies of Curriculum and Instruction in the United States
Arthur N. Applebee
Applebee provides a scholarly appraisal of the literature curriculum at the middle school and secondary levels, based on a series of field studies examining literature instruction in public and private schools.
Situating Readers: Students Making Meaning of Literature
Harold A. Vine Jr. and Mark A. Faust
Vine and Faust encourage literature teachers at the high school and college level to empower their students as readers—and meaning-makers—of literature.