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E-raamat: Transforming Literacy Education for Long-Term English Learners: Recognizing Brilliance in the Undervalued

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Grounded in research on bilingualism and adolescent literacy, this volume provides a much-needed insight into the day-to-day needs of students who are identified as long-term English language learners (LTELs). LTELs are adolescents who are primarily or solely educated in the U.S. and yet remain identified as "learning English" in secondary school. Challenging the deficit perspective that is often applied to their experiences of language learning, Brooks counters incorrect characterizations of LTELs and sheds light on students strengths to argue that effective literacy education requires looking beyond policy classifications that are often used to guide educational decisions for this population.

By combining research, theory, and practice, this book offers a comprehensive analysis of literacy pedagogy to facilitate teacher learning and includes practical takeaways and implications for classroom practice and professional development. Offering a pathway for transforming literacy education for students identified as LTELs, chapters discuss reframing the education of LTELs, academic reading in the classroom, and the bilingualism of students who are labeled LTELs.

Transforming Literacy Education for Long-Term English Learners is a much-needed resource for scholars, professors, researchers, and graduate students in language and literacy education, English education, and teacher education, and for those who are looking to create an inclusive and successful classroom environment for LTELs.
List of Illustrations
x
Series Editors' Foreword xii
Chapter 1 More than Long-term English Learners: Reframing the Education of an Under-served Population
1(17)
Who are Long-term English Learners?
2(3)
Damage-centered Research and LTELs
5(2)
Power of Labels
6(1)
Humanizing Reading Instruction for LTELs
7(2)
LTELs, Literacy Instruction, and the Importance of Framing
9(4)
Alternative Frames for Understanding LTEL Student Experiences
10(3)
More than English Learners: Pushing Past Policy Classifications
13(3)
A More Humanizing Perspective on Reading Pedagogy
15(1)
Significance of this Book
16(2)
Chapter 2 Bilingualism and Students who are Labeled LTELs
18(19)
Valuing the Devalued
19(8)
Bilingualism for English Reading Pedagogy
20(2)
Language Use and Dynamic Bilingualism
22(5)
The Role of Racial Positioning
27(1)
The Focal Students
27(6)
Five Focal Students' Linguistic Histories
29(4)
Implications for Students Considered to be LTELs
33(4)
Chapter 3 Local Texts: The Textual Environment of Biology and English Language Arts
37(17)
Reading, Texts, and Comprehension
38(1)
Academic Texts in Mrs. Rodriguez and Mr. Gomez's Classrooms
39(9)
Patterns in Overall Text Use
40(1)
The Predominance of Teacher-assembled Texts
41(5)
Books: A Noteworthy Disciplinary Exception
46(2)
Implications for Students Considered to be LTELs
48(2)
Next Steps
50(3)
Text Sets to Build Background Knowledge
51(1)
Linked Text Sets
52(1)
Closing
53(1)
Chapter 4 Strong and Loud Readers: Academic Reading in the Classroom
54(17)
Academic Reading in Practice
55(11)
An Introduction to the Nervous System
57(4)
"Effective" Reading in English Language Arts
61(5)
Implications for Students Considered to be LTELs
66(1)
Next Steps
67(1)
Successful Readers
67(2)
Meaningful for Futures
69(1)
Closing
69(2)
Chapter 5 Constructing Meaning Independently: An In-depth Analysis of Reading from an Individual Perspective
71(18)
Five Similar Perspectives on Reading
72(2)
Interrelation of Experiences and Ideas about Reading
73(1)
"Doing" Independent Reading
74(8)
Text Selection
74(1)
Student Discontent
75(1)
Think-Aloud Instructions
76(1)
Independent Reading in Action
76(6)
Reading Strategies in the Classroom
82(3)
Engagement with Unfamiliar Content
83(2)
Implications for Students Considered to be LTELs
85(1)
Next Steps
86(2)
Closing
88(1)
Chapter 6 Recognizing Brilliance in the Undervalued: Transforming Literacy Education for Long-term English Learners
89(6)
A Focus on Opportunity to Learn
91(2)
Reading Pedagogy: A Humanizing and Socially Informed Perspective
93(1)
Moving Forward
93(2)
References 95(14)
Index 109
Maneka Deanna Brooks is an Assistant Professor of Reading Education at Texas State University, USA.