MAX Teaching with Reading and Writing: Classroom Activities to Help Students Learn Subject Matter While Acquiring New Skills

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Trafford Publishing, May 23, 2007 - Education - 282 pages

This book is divided into two parts.

Part I presents to the reader three essential components of a complete reading/writing-to-learn classroom. The three components are 1) a three-step lesson framework (MAX Teaching), 2) a three-step skill acquisition model (SAM), and 3) the systematic and formulaic use of cooperative learning (CL). The three of these components combine and are interwoven to provide for and to facilitate student acquisition of both content and skills through daily practice. Each of these will be described, explained, and justified with supporting research based on what we have learned during the 20th century from cognitive psychology, and through the more modern study of the human brain and brain functioning in the learning process.

Part II describes specific classroom strategies that have been developed over the last three decades. Each strategy is introduced, explained, and then presented as a generic lesson plan that could be applied to virtually any given subject area lesson. These lessons have been carefully laid out to include all three components listed above. Each lesson includes step-by-step instructions on what to do and say throughout the lesson to incorporate the use of the MAX teaching framework, a focus on skill development, and important elements of cooperative learning. My work with thousands of teachers over the past 11 years has led me to see the desire for such explicitly outlined lessons. The lessons are by no means the only way to apply a particular strategy. However, each is based on years of experience with students in various subject areas and of various ages. That being said, the way the lessons in part two are presented is meant to be generic enough and flexible enough to be helpful in assisting any teacher to become comfortable with the use of reading and writing to help students acquire both content and skills.

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Contents

generic lesson plans for contentliteracybased classroom instruction
97
Appendix 1
234
Appendix 2
235
Appendix 3
244
Appendix 4
249
Appendix 5
250
Appendix 6
251
Appendix 7
252
Appendix 8
254
References
256
Index
263
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Dr. Forget (pronounced forjy) has been a school teacher from 1974 until the present. He has taught at the elementary, middle, and high school levels. The vast majority of his teaching experience is in the high school (19 years). He has applied the strategies of content area reading instruction in the teaching of algebra, trigonometry, statistics, American history, American Government, geography, earth science, world history, health and physical education, and, as a reading teacher, in many other classes as a guest teacher. He has taught undergraduate and graduate courses in content area reading instruction for over ten years at Old Dominion University and the University of Findlay. He is the co-author of Reading for Success: A School to Work Approach, published in 1996, and principal author of the accompanying instructor's manual. He also is the author of many published articles on teaching through reading and writing. He is a nationally-recognized staff developer in the field of content area reading instruction.

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