Action Research for English Language Arts Teachers

Action Research for English Language Arts Teachers
Author: Mary Buckelew
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2019-03-13
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0429881444

Offering preservice and inservice teachers a guide to navigate the rapidly changing landscape of English Language Arts education, this book provides a fresh perspective on what it means to be a teacher researcher in ELA contexts. Inviting teachers to view inquiry and reflection as intrinsic to their identity and mission, Buckelew and Ewing walk readers through the inquiry process from developing an actionable focus, to data collection and analysis to publication and the exploration of ongoing questions. Providing thoughtful and relevant protocols and models for teacher inquiry, this book establishes a theoretical foundation and offers practical, ready-to-use tools and strategies for engaging in the inquiry process in the context of teachers’ communities. Action Research for English Language Arts Teachers: Invitation to Inquiry includes a variety of examples and scenarios of ELA teachers in diverse contexts, ensuring that this volume is relevant and accessible to all educators.

Doing Action Research in English Language Teaching

Doing Action Research in English Language Teaching
Author: Anne Burns
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 207
Release: 2009-12-04
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1135183848

This hands-on, practical guide for ESL/EFL teachers and teacher educators outlines, for those who are new to doing action research, what it is and how it works. Straightforward and reader friendly, it introduces the concepts and offers a step-by-step guide to going through an action research process, including illustrations drawn widely from international contexts. Each chapter includes a variety of pedagogical activities. Bringing the how-to and the what together, this is the perfect text for BATESOL and MATESOL courses in which action research is the focus or a required component.

Action Research in STEM and English Language Learning

Action Research in STEM and English Language Learning
Author: Aria Razfar
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2022-05-29
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1351001140

Responding to the linguistic and cultural diversity of the U.S. K–12 student population and an increasing emphasis on STEM, this book offers a model for professional development that engages teachers in transformative action research projects and explicitly links literacy to mathematics and science curriculum through sociocultural principles. Providing detailed and meaningful demonstrations of participatory action research in the classroom, Razfar and Troiano present an effective, systemic approach that helps preservice teachers support students’ funds of knowledge. By featuring teacher and researcher narratives, this book centers teacher expertise and offers a more holistic and humanistic understanding of authentic and empathetic teaching. Focusing on integrating instructional knowledge from ESL, bilingual, and STEM education, the range of cases and examples will allow readers to implement action research projects in their own classrooms. Chapters include discussion questions and additional resources for students, researchers, and educators.

Teaching Language as Action in the ELA Classroom

Teaching Language as Action in the ELA Classroom
Author: Richard Beach
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2019-03-14
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1000000117

This book explores English language arts instruction from the perspective of language as "social actions" that students and teachers enact with and toward one another to create supportive, trusting relations between students and teachers, and among students as peers. Departing from a code-based view of language as a set of systems or structures, the perspective of languaging as social actions takes up language as emotive, embodied, and inseparable from the intellectual life of the classroom. Through extensive classroom examples, the book demonstrates how elementary and secondary ELA teachers can apply a languaging perspective. Beach and Beauchemin employ pedagogical cases and activities to illustrate how to enhance students’ engagement in open-ended discussions, responses to literature, writing for audiences, drama activities, and online interactions. The authors also offer methods for fostering students' self-reflection to improve their sense of agency associated with enhancing relations in face-to-face, rhetorical, and online contexts.

Action Research for Language Teachers

Action Research for Language Teachers
Author: Michael J. Wallace
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 285
Release: 1998
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0521555353

A practical resource that supports teachers and trainee teachers to investigate their teaching in a systematic and organised way.

Handbook of Research on Teaching the English Language Arts

Handbook of Research on Teaching the English Language Arts
Author: James Flood
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers
Total Pages: 918
Release: 1991
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780029223826

Jointly sponsored by the International Reading Assn. and the Natl. Council of Teachers of English, the Handbook contains some 70 original articles by authorities in the field of language arts. The articles are organized into five sections: theoretical bases for English language arts teaching, method

Teaching to Exceed in the English Language Arts

Teaching to Exceed in the English Language Arts
Author: Richard Beach
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2022-07-21
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1000605760

Timely, thoughtful, and comprehensive, this text directly supports pre-service and in-service teachers in developing curriculum and instruction that both addresses and exceeds the requirements of English language arts standards. It demonstrates how the Common Core State Standards as well as other local and national standards’ highest and best intentions for student success can be implemented from a critical, culturally relevant perspective firmly grounded in current literacy learning theory and research. The third edition frames ELA instruction around adopting a justice, inquiry, and action approach that supports students in their schools and community contexts. Offering new ways to respond to current issues and events, the text provides specific examples of teachers employing the justice, inquiry, and action curriculum framework to promote critical engagement and learning. Chapters cover common problems and challenges, alternative models, and theories of language arts teaching. The framework, knowledge, and guidance in this book shows how ELA standards can not only be addressed but also surpassed through engaging instruction to foster truly diverse and inclusive classrooms. The third edition provides new material on: adopting a justice, inquiry, and action approach to enhance student engagement and critical thinking planning instruction to effectively implement standards in the classroom teaching literary and informational texts, with a focus on authors of color integrating drama activities into literature teaching informational, explanatory, argumentative, and narrative writing supporting bilingual/ELL students using digital tools and apps to respond to and create digital texts addressing how larger contextual and political factors shape instruction fostering preservice teacher development

Guiding School Improvement with Action Research

Guiding School Improvement with Action Research
Author: Richard Sagor
Publisher: ASCD
Total Pages: 231
Release: 2000
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0871203758

Provides an explanation of what action research is, presents a rationale for engaging in action research, and describes the process of action research for improving teaching and learning in classrooms at all levels.

Taking Action with Teacher Research

Taking Action with Teacher Research
Author: Ellen Meyers
Publisher: Heinemann Educational Books
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2003
Genre: Education
ISBN:

More and more, classroom teachers are using action research strategies to tackle basic issues and daily dilemmas-everything from designing their own professional development to reshaping instructional practice. Through their support of teachers who are eager to take up this work, Ellen Meyers and Frances Rust have found that the challenges to the reform of public schools are most likely to surface in three areas: resources needed to meet standards, conditions of the workplace, and status of the teaching profession. Their book is a lucid guide for teachers to address these and other problems in classrooms and beyond; to ask the right questions and design and implement research to find answers; and to use this data to effect change. Every chapter contains rich examples of teacher research in action. Jane Fung focuses on the conditions of schooling and the status of teachers in an elementary school in downtown Los Angeles. Lara Goldstone, teaching in New York's Chinatown, looks at obstacles to successful communication with the parents of her students. In a Lower East Side middle school, Matt Wayne confronts the problem of getting appropriate books for struggling eighth-grade students. Carol Tureski at a high school in Queens finds that lack of access to high-interest, culturally relevant resources is a significant barrier to facilitating adolescent literacy. Janet Price, also at a Queens high school, shows what can happen when teachers set the agenda for professional development around assessment in their school. Natasha Warikoo at a Manhattan high school looks at the impact of class size on her teaching of second-language learners in her math class. When teachers consider themselves to be researchers, not just consumers of research, they are exercising leadership. And when teachers form networks to share their knowledge, they are breaking down obstacles that have thwarted their leadership for so long. Action research empowers teachers to do just that-to lead reform efforts and provide the remedies needed for all children to succeed. The studies in this book are part of the work of the Teachers Network Policy Institute, whose mission is to give teachers an active voice in education policy making. For more information, contact www.teachersnetwork.org. All proceeds support the Teachers Network Policy Institute.