
Use this unique volume to transform the learning and teaching of language so that all students are empowered to succeed. This book offers insight into how to teach language--a core component of developing skilled readers and writers across all content areas--in ways that value the rich and diverse language assets students bring to the classroom. The authors provide guidance to help K-12 teachers move beyond current approaches to teaching language in the classroom to support equitable student outcomes in both linguistically diverse and linguistically homogeneous classrooms. The text provides a step-by-step process to uncover conceptions of language and its instruction that undercut opportunities to learn. Readers will gain new strategies for teaching the language of school tasks while integrating students' distinctive language experiences as resources for learning. School leaders will learn how to implement a schoolwide exploration into teaching language that promotes equity, all while building collaboration among administrators, teachers, and students.
Book Features:
Sabina Rak Neugebauer is an associate professor of literacy in the College of Education and Human Development at Temple University. Emily Phillips Galloway is an assistant professor of multilingual learning and literacy education at Peabody College, Vanderbilt University. Christina L. Dobbs is an assistant professor and director of English education for equity and justice, at Wheelock College of Education and Human Development, Boston University.
"Teachers receive advice on how to value their students' various linguistic capabilities and to avoid linguicism, which the authors define as 'discrimination based on one's language.' Recommended."
--CHOICE