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  • CCSS GuidelinesThe IRA Common Core State Standards Committee developed these guidelines to help educators implement the English Language Arts Standards.
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    IRA Releases Guidance for ELA Common Core State Standards

     | Oct 08, 2012

    The International Reading Association (IRA) announces the release of a set of guidelines for the successful implementation of the English Language Arts (ELA) Common Core State Standards (CCSS). This guidelines white paper/statement entitled Literacy Implementation Guidance for the ELA Common Core State Standards can be downloaded for free at /ccssguidelines.

    These guidelines address the need for a link between reading instruction and the ELA CCSS. They provide teachers and educational leaders with recommendations on how to integrate many of the central ideas of the standards into effective practice. They represent a consensus of the thinking of literacy leaders in the field who support thoughtful implementation of the standards for student literacy achievement.

    Carrice Cummins
    Carrice Cummins
    “Reading instruction remains at the core of any successful education reform,” IRA president Carrice Cummins explained. “The Standards set a foundation for focusing curriculum and instruction, and IRA’s Reading Guidelines will serve as a lens to link them together and empower teachers to focus on what is needed to make a difference for their students.”

    The guidelines capture the most pressing issues in clear language, point out their significance for those responsible for implementation, and then offer clear guidance on accomplishing the task at hand. Seven specific issues are addressed, including: 

    • Challenging texts
    • Foundational skills
    • Comprehension
    • Vocabulary
    • Writing
    • Disciplinary literacy
    • Diverse learners

    Brenda Overturf


    Timothy Shanahan
    The guidelines were drafted by a special IRA CCSS committee that included: Brenda Overturf, Literacy Perspectives, LLC, Co-Chair; Timothy Shanahan, University of Illinois, Chicago, Co-Chair; Les Burns, University of Kentucky; Lori DiGisi, Common Core Literacy Consultant; Elfreida Hiebert, Text Project, Inc.; Sarah Fleming Mahurt, St. Croix; Lesley Morrow, Rutgers University; Dorothy Strickland,  Rutgers University; Maureen McLaughlin, President-Elect of IRA, East Stroudsburg University of PA; William Teale, IRA Board Member Liaison, University of Illinois, Chicago; and Rich Long, IRA Government Relations Director, Ex Officio.

    On the CCSS guidelines webpage, there is also an opportunity to join the IRA mailing list and receive notification of CCSS-related publications in the future.

    IRA also offers a CCSS question-and-answer webpage as well as resources from IRA journals, IRA books, IRA webinars, Reading Today, Members-Only, and other organization websites on a special section of our website at /elacommoncore.

     

     

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  • Greg NeriGreg Neri was the most recipient of the IRA Lee Bennett Hopkins Promising Poet Award for an outstanding new writer of children’s poetry.
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    November 15 is the Deadline for IRA Promising Poet Award

     | Oct 08, 2012

    by Elizabeth Bleacher

    The International Reading Association (IRA) Lee Bennett Hopkins Promising Poet Award is intended for an outstanding new writer of children’s poetry. The award, given every three years, was established to recognize Lee Bennett Hopkins’ prodigious contribution to children’s poetry and to build upon his legacy. The deadline for submission is November 15.

    The award committee is currently accepting applications for poetry copyrighted between 2010 and 2012. Perspective recipients may submit a book length poem for review when they apply. The poem must have been published within the appropriate time frame, and the author may not have more than two children’s poetry books published.

    After they have submitted the initial application, authors will receive more instructions via the e-mail that they provided on the form. At that point, the author will be expected to supply each committee member with a copy of the book being reviewed, and the e-mail will provide the necessary shipping information. For applications to be considered complete and on time, committee members must receive the books by November 15.

    Poems published in any language may be submitted; authors must simply accompany their original text with an English translation. All poetry will be judged on literary merit, appeal to children, and evidence of a fresh, insightful voice.

    Greg NeriThe 2010 award recipient was Gregory Neri for his debut poetry book, Chess Rumble. Originally from Los Angeles, he is an award-winning filmmaker that has always harbored a love for storytelling. Chess Rumble started out as a picture book that shifted towards children’s poetry when Neri felt a new story emerging. He currently devotes his time to writing for children and teens.

    More information about the Lee Bennett Hopkins Promising Poet Award application process can be found at the International Reading Association website

    Elizabeth Bleacher is the strategic communications intern at the International Reading Association.


     

     

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  • Skinner and HagoodEmily Neil Skinner and Margaret Carmody Hagood, both from South Carolina, are the new editors of the Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy (JAAL).
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    New Editors for the Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy

     | Oct 05, 2012

    Emily Neil Skinner and
    Margaret Carmody Hagood


    This fall marks the debut of a new editorial team for the Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy (JAAL), the International Reading Association’s premier research publication for literacy professionals focused on readers in the middle school grades and beyond. Margaret Carmody Hagood and Emily Neil Skinner, both of the College of Charleston, South Carolina, have been adjudicating JAAL article submissions for the better part of a year. As of this writing they report that the submission pipeline is thriving and that enough accepted articles have been processed to fill the first five issues.

    Hagood and Skinner, who were appointed to the JAAL editorship in 2011 by the IRA Board of Directors, bring a bold new vision to the journal. They aim to position it as the central resource for a literacy community challenged both by integrating emergent technologies in instruction and by improving foundational literacies. They strive to provide a multitude of perspectives on current relevant topics such as the pressures of the new Common Core State Standards designed to insure college and career readiness. Their approach, evidenced in the content and component elements of the redesigned publication, is to refract the concepts of text and literacies into the spectrum of concurrent issues which teachers and researchers must address every day.

    Prismatic Scope of Topical Coverage

    To Hagood and Skinner, “text” as a focus category for the literacy community is not one thing but many, including print-based and digital, personal, and professional. Likewise literacy is not merely reading, but also writing, listening, speaking, viewing, and designing.

    What’s more, the prismatic scope of their topical coverage is firmly grounded in a strong emphasis on praxis. They prize above all pieces where clear and detailed strategies for practical implementation are buttressed by quality research and supporting theory.

    True to form, they have been accepting multimodal articles in which print text is supported by video elements and other items made available online. Most of all, Hagood and Skinner have an innate appreciation of the often overlooked reality that all media is, by definition, social. They are keen to position the new JAAL at the center of a professional literacy community that is in continual dialogue about critical issues and best practices.

    Forming a Participatory Culture

    Journal of Adolescent & Adult LiteracyIn their inaugural editorial, the editors lay out the general vision that will drive their efforts: “Our vision for JAAL is grounded in connecting contexts (e.g., local and global), stakeholders (e.g., policymakers, scholars, and practitioners), and literacies (e.g., foundational, print-based, and new digital).”

    Hagood and Skinner imagine JAAL as a participatory culture (Jenkins 2006) where JAAL readers not only consume content but also produce new ideas through conversations. In this way, they explain, “JAAL will serve as a forum for discussion of innovative research and practical applications to address content, motivation, engagement, and assessment of diverse populations of literacy learners in print and online formats.” They emphasize that JAAL will have a balance of coverage between print and digital literacy.

    Multimodal and Social Media Support

    Hagood and Skinner welcome multimodal texts such as video that accompany authors’ print submissions. So far the invitation has been a growing success, for they report that there is at least one video component for each journal issue they have completed. Short podcasts highlighting journal article content are also in the works. Moreover, the editors want everyone to know that JAAL has a new Facebook page.

    “Please ‘Like’ us and join in the conversation,” they ask. (The link is given in the sidebar to this article.) Hagood and Skinner have regularly been posting resources and queries on Facebook and are grateful to JAAL subscribers who have already posted responses, shared resources, and initiated inquiries.

    New Features and Departments

    Hagood and Skinner seek to accomplish their new vision, in part, by means of several new features and which they have instituted in the journal. These include:

    • Meeting of the Minds, a column bringing together print and online communities, drawing on Facebook conversations, and readers’ dialogue on previous JAAL content and related literacy topics.
    • Literacy Lenses, short first person nonacademic essays that spotlight diverse perspectives on teaching and learning literacies. The editors hope to have pieces from middle and high school teachers, media specialists, librarians, literacy coaches, curriculum specialists, administrators, pre-service teachers, and adolescent and adult learners.
    Four new departments will also run every other month in JAAL, each of which will be prepared by an assigned editor. These include:
    • Policy and Advocacy, Fenice Boyd, University of Buffalo, Editor
    • Content Area/Disciplinary Literacy, Zhuihui Fang, University of Florida, Editor
    • Pop Culture/Digital Literacies, Jesse Gainer, Texas State University, Editor
    • Multiliteracies: Production and Consumption, Gloria Jacobs, Unaffiliated/Independent Scholar, Editor
    Each department editor will organize one “water cooler” column per volume year, in which different stakeholders will be brought together to converse about a specific literacy issue.

    Hagood and Skinner are also seeking adolescent and adult submissions of cover art, including photographs and artwork that answers the question “How are literacies enacted in the lives of adolescents and adults and what do they look like?”

    Text Review Forum

    A new Text Review Forum will focus on the changing face of texts in literacy teaching and learning. Three main text types will be covered by assigned editors:
    • Print Based Texts, James Blasingame, Arizona State University, Editor
    • Visual and Digital Texts, Gwynne Ash, Texas State University, Editor
    • Professional Resources, Roni Jo Draper, Bringham Young University, Editor
    Across these three areas, connections will be emphasized between work and pleasure, academic and pop culture, and print and nonprint uses by adolescents and adults to both consume and produce texts.

    Indispensable Resource

    In sum, the new JAAL is a resource practitioners in the field cannot afford to skip. If you’re not reading JAAL, you’re missing out on the most cutting edge scholarship as well as the opportunity to network within an important community of researchers, teachers, administrators, and others dedicated to improving literacy skills in older students and adults. Don’t be left out. Don’t fall behind. Order your subscription now!

    This article was reprinted from the August/September 2012 issue of Reading Today. IRA members can read the interactive digital version of the magazine. Nonmembers: join today!


     

     

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  • Diane LappIn 2012 Diane Lapp received this award for reading teacher educators who have a significant commitment to improving reading instruction in public schools.
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    Apply for the IRA John Chorlton Manning Award by November 15

     | Oct 04, 2012

    by Elizabeth Bleacher

    The International Reading Association (IRA) John Chorlton Manning Public School Service Award is a non-monetary award that seeks to emphasize the importance of strengthening public education. The award is presented in memory of Professor John Chorlton Manning, an international authority on beginning reading instruction, with the intention of honoring his legacy and continuing his work.

    Nominees for the award should be reading teacher educators that have demonstrated a significant commitment to improving reading instruction in public schools. Potential recipients should also have considerable experience working with public school teachers and their students within the classroom. Aside from these criteria, nominees must have a teaching affiliation with a college or university and be current IRA members.

    The deadline for submission is November 15, 2012. Colleagues, students, or the nominees themselves may submit an application for the award.

    Diane LappThe 2013 award recipient will be invited to attend the IRA 58th Annual Convention from April 19 to 22, 2013, in San Antonio, Texas.

    Diane Lapp, EdD, received the John Chorlton Manning award in 2011 for her work with struggling readers and writers in economically limited areas. She is a distinguished professor of education at San Diego State University and a coeditor of Voices from the Middle. Currently, she is teaching English literacy to high school students.

    Visit the IRA John Chorlton Manning Public School Service Award webpage for more information and the application.

    Elizabeth Bleacher is the strategic communications intern at the International Reading Association.

     

     

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  • Charline Barnes RowlandIn 2012, Charline Barnes Rowland received this $1,000 award that honors an exceptional college or university professor in the field of reading education.
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    Reading Teacher Educators: Apply for the IRA Jerry Johns Award

     | Oct 02, 2012

    by Elizabeth Bleacher

    The International Reading Association (IRA) Jerry Johns Outstanding Teacher Educator in Reading Award is meant to honor an exceptional college or university professor in the field of reading education. The award is US$1,000 maintained by Jerry Johns, president of the IRA from 2002-2003 and a distinguished teaching professor emeritus at Northern Illinois University.

    The award is given annually to a member of IRA that is currently teaching preparation in reading to perspective educators at the undergraduate or graduate level. The submission deadline for the award’s application is November 15, 2012.

    An ideal recipient is considered to be a knowledgeable professional, an innovative teacher, a leader in the field of reading, a role model, and a disseminator. Applications for the award can be submitted by colleagues, students, or the nominees themselves.

    Charline Barnes Rowland

    The 2013 award recipient will be invited to attend the IRA 58th Annual Convention from April 19 to 22, 2013, in San Antonio, Texas.

    The 2012 award was given to Charline Barnes Rowland, EdD, an associate professor at West Virginia University. She teaches various reading methods courses at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. Her areas of interest include literacy education and teacher education, with a concentration on the global curriculum. More information on the application process can be found at the IRA website.

    Elizabeth Bleacher is the strategic communications intern at the International Reading Association.

     

     

     

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