Teaching reading is the responsibility of all teachers but how? This is the book that highlights the critical skills regardless of age or curricula. It emphasizes the active view of reading, the critical nature of reading for purpose, starts from what the reader brings to the text, and acknowledges that reading tasks and purposes can be unique to content areas. Packed with great ideas, grounded in research, and written for the teacher who wants to increase their impact on their students to share the passion for learning. -- John Hattie * Melbourne Laureate Professor Emeritus * Teaching reading and learning to read are enormously complex tasks. It certainly involves phonics, but so much more. Jennifer Serravallo does a masterful job of unpacking what is involved in becoming a proficient reader. Equally important, she provides remarkably clear and readable examples, with supporting detail, of how to teach those many essential competencies involved in reading instruction. Its one thing to talk about what needs to be done to create readers; its quite another to actually show how its done in the classroom. Clearly Jennifer Serravallo is a master of both! If youre interested in putting the science of reading into action, this book is for you. -- Timothy Rasinski, Ph.D. * Professor Emeritus, Literacy Education * We know that teaching reading is rocket science but arent always sure how to fly the ship. This is the instruction manual. Its the guide you need to right the ship and ensure that students learn to read at high levels. Youll find practical ideas and examples that help you maneuver the complex world of literacy learning with ease. -- Douglas Fisher * Professor, San Diego State University * This book is packed with tools, tables, tips, and practical lesson structures that support predictability and teacher decision-making. With student engagement front and center, Jen shows us that we dont have to choose between structured and responsive teaching. Kids need both! -- Kari Yates Once in a generation a teachers teacher comes along and makes plain what adults can do to ensure children thrive. Jen is that teacher, and this book is required reading for all of us who believe every child can develop powerful literacies, and want a role to play in that development. -- Rachael Gabriel This timely, thorough text from educator and author Serravallo (The Reading Strategies Book) presents a convincing case for integrating reading throughout K-8 students school day, as well as concrete strategies and structures for making it happen. After two chapters focused on the foundations of reading education and the importance of explicit reading instruction across the disciplines, the subsequent chapters each highlight a specific structure for explicitly engaging students in reading, from read-alouds to readers theater. Each chapter in this "Lesson Structures" section is full of detailed examples, research, and resources for lesson planning. Serravallo employs a consistent format in each chapter, opening with an annotated lesson example before providing summaries of the research related to this lesson type, considerations for planning, videos of sample lessons in action, and practical suggestions for teaching the lesson structure. This book provides excellent resources for employing a variety of engaging reading strategies that have wide applicability across K-8 contexts. Purchase for libraries with a focus on reading, explicit instruction, or a new curriculum. -- School Library Journal I love the annotated lesson plans that show this is what I had planned, but this happened, because thats life in the classroom. Theres no scripted program or curriculum that can address the kids in front of you necessarily. The lesson structures [ in Teaching Reading Across the Day] offer teachers the background information they need but also the flexibility . . . to make the decisions about whats best for their students. -- Olivia Wahl