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    The Reading Teacher Journal Gets a Facelift

     | Oct 03, 2011

    Subscribers should prepare themselves before heading to the mailbox. The excitement could be overwhelming.

    The Reading Teacher journal cover

    Thrilling changes and new features are in store for The Reading Teacher, IRA’s most prominent journal and the best-known resource for classroom teachers in the elementary and middle school grades. A new editorial team has been vetting submissions over the past year and also working on a graphic redesign. As subscribers will soon discover, the new look is bold and the content sizzles. 

    The inaugural issue, which releases in September, includes a treasure trove of classroom strategies and teaching tips that can be readily utilized as teachers start the new school year. Insightful and easy-to-read articles authored by active teachers and leading literacy professionals provide lots of takeaways for new and experienced teachers alike.  Book lists, schematic action charts, sample student work, online screen shots, and helpful links, offer only a glimpse of the resources that The Reading Teacher provides, and it’s all presented with the classroom in mind.

    Strict Focus on the Practical

    According to the editors, Diane Barone, University of Nevada, Reno, and Marla Mallette, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, RT’s focus has been deliberately adjusted. Barone and Mallette say they will continue to seek “well-written, original descriptions of research based instruction that improves literacy learning of children through age 12,” Diane Baronebut the articles will be written with a different intention.
    RT will now stress the practical application of research-supported strategies in the classroom, while deemphasizing the kind of theoretical analysis that is more properly found in hard core research journals such as IRA’s own Reading Research Quarterly. As Barone and Mallette explain in their opening editorial, the journal will “focus more on the application of research than original research.” The result is a journal filled with tools that can be applied directly to the classroom, just in time for school to begin.
    Solutions that Address Pressing Needs
    When you’re standing in front of your class, chances are you’re not dwelling too much on theory. Exploiting the teachable moment often requires a carefully considered game plan with a variety of strategic options that can be deployed as circumstances warrant and as the rigor of differentiated instruction demands. 
    Marla Mallette
    But you also want the confidence that comes from knowing that the approaches you’re using have strong support in research.

    The new RT takes you right there in a flash. In the first issue, you’ll find important guidance, analysis, and suggestions for dealing with a slew of challenges, including:
    Developing author voice in your own students
    Making better use of children’s literature
    Using structured shared reading routines to help learners with developmental disabilities
    Using Vocabulary Quilts to build word knowledge in English learners
    Seeing the pitfalls in assessment systems biased toward constrained skills
    Teaching mathematical measurement with literature
    Using Word Walk to enhance vocabulary instruction of young children

    A “Wow!” Feature for New Teachers

    If you’re new to teaching, you won’t want to miss the next volume year of RT. Barone and Mallette have come up with a special feature, The Inside Track, in which a number of the literacy field’s leading figures will offer practical, plain-English guidance and suggestions to you on how to approach key issues in your classroom pedagogy and professional development.
    Authors of The Inside Track series have been carefully selected by special invitation of the editors. Each expert author was charged with answering the question: “What are the most important things every literacy educator should know about (blank)?” Leading off in the September issue, Nell Duke, Michigan State, and Nicole Martin, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, respond on the crucial subject of research.

    Want to know who’s coming in the rest of the lineup? You’ll have to subscribe to RT

    New Departments

    These changes alone would make RT a peerless resource, but there’s still more to the exciting publishing plan the editors have prepared. Barone and Mallette believe very strongly that RT must address “the most critical issues that need to be brought before the journal’s readership in the next two to five years.”
    To round out the coverage, they have decided on six departments, and invited dynamic, 
    highly regarded and insightful scholars to serve as the supervising editors. Two of these items will run in each issue. The roster reads as follows: 
    Integrating Children’s Literature – Frank Serrafini
    Research Into Practice – Katherine Stahl
    Literacy and Language Learners – James Cummins
    From the Start: The Effective Reading Teacher – Kathleen Roskos and Susan Neuman
    Perspectives on RTI – Karen Wixson and Marjorie Lipson
    From Policy to Practice – Norm Stahl

    Ideal for In-House PD

    All of these adjustments to RT were also made with today’s harsh economic realities in mind. The fact is that many schools and districts will not have funds available in the coming year to invest in the professional development of their teaching staffs. Many schools will be in a position of having to develop in-house programs to make up the difference in the interim.

    As the editors will tell you, the new RT is an ideal resource for professional learning communities. Aside from its carefully vetted articles and accentuated practical focus, the new journal has retained the Take Action, More to Explore, Pause and Ponder, Toolkit, and Voice from the Chalkboard features introduced under the prior editorship. “These enhancements are ideal for facilitators and small group leaders, as well as for self-directed development,” Barone and Mallette said.

    Pink Vanilla

    As for the look and feel of the revamped journal, the editors describe it as “pink vanilla.” Primarily a reference to the color tone that runs through the new graphics, pink vanilla also reflects Barone and Mallette’s perspectives on innovation and continuity in the life of a professional periodical.

    Vanilla speaks to RT’s legacy and what continues unbroken in the history of this outstanding journal. Longtime subscribers will enjoy this part of the opening editorial in which Barone and Mallette reflect on the recurring topics the journal has addressed over the many years it has published. The editors acknowledge the paths blazed by their predecessors and include a historical chart listing all of the journal’s editorial teams since its inception. 

    Pink might suggest a new twist and spin, the novel ingredients that constitute the personal mark this editorship will leave for posterity. In this respect, two changes are immediately evident. 

    First, the rigid separation of articles from feature and department pieces has been completely eschewed in the layout. Starting in the first issue, these will be totally intermixed. As Barone and Mallette explain, there is no second or third class ranking of content within the journal. “If a piece is in RT, it’s in there because it is important.”

    Secondly, the editors have tried as much as possible to avoid the use of stock photographs within the journal and on its cover. “We want to capture authentic literacy moments as they happen in today’s classrooms.” To this end they are soliciting digital photographs taken of actual teachers and students in class. In forwarding files containing images of children, be sure to include the appropriate releases.

    Advice for New Teachers: Take The Inside Track

    The new RT includes a special year-long series designed specifically for new teachers called The Inside Track. In each issue a leading member of the literacy field will provide easy-to-read professional guidance especially tailored to beginners in a “What are the Most Important Things You Need to Know about (blank)” format. An equivalent access to mentors this notable would be next to impossible to find. The topics lined up for the series include: 
    Reading Research
    Motivation
    Composition
    Classroom Conversations
    Vocabulary
    New Literacies
    Fluency
    Classroom Organization

    Want to Publish a Piece in RT? Here’s What the New Editors Advise

    The new editors are adhering to a strict insistence on practical applications in all of the submissions which receive an accepted adjudication after peer review. Consequently, they advise all prospective authors to proceed using one of two basic approaches:

    Write a practitioner-oriented article based on previously published research.
    Or
    If your article is based on your research study, abandon the traditional research report genre, and only include a brief summary of the research methods employed, along with a link to an online research supplement containing a more detailed description.

    For an example of the latter approach, see the article on iPED, a new technology for digital text production, in Volume 65 Issue 1 of The Reading Teacher

    The Reading Teacher is a peer-reviewed journal published eight times a year. Visit the International Reading Association's membership information webpage to learn how to join IRA and sign up to receive RT and other journals. Click here for more information about The Reading Teacher.
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    Faster and Easier: the New IRA Catalog

     | Sep 12, 2011

    Excitement swirled around the publication of the fall 2011 International Reading Association (IRA) publications catalog, but the collection of literacy resources wasn’t the only draw. This catalog is the first IRA catalog to feature an interactive shopping cart that allows readers to purchase items while browsing the digital version.

    IRA Catalog Fall 2011

    The IRA publications catalog was released as an interactive digital version as well as in print for the first time in spring 2011. The fall issue brings the addition of red “buy” buttons next to each publication description in the online catalog. Clicking “buy” adds the item to a shopping cart, which you can check by clicking on a red cart icon at the top of each page. This digital interaction replaces the paper order form in the print edition. IRA member and bulk order discounts are automatically applied during the checkout process. 

    Another new feature to the fall 2011 catalog is the addition of icons that highlight books on Common Core and Response to Intervention. Two pages of the catalog recommend books that are helpful with these topics, and “CC” and “RTI” symbols appear next to appropriate book listings throughout the catalog. New books and bestsellers are also called out with red “NEW!” and “BESTSELLER!” tags. 

    While all IRA resources couldn’t fit into the catalog, such as the popular $6.95 sale bookstore, IRA Books Marketing Associate Nicola Wedderburn says there’s more online. “The selection is always changing. You can find books, e-books, DVDs, lots of other resources on the website.” By visiting /books, you can view the books by title, by author, and many other ways.

    This fall’s catalog is just the beginning of IRA’s efforts to make professional development easier for IRA members and all literacy professionals. To view the digital catalog, go to /fall2011
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    New Journal Publishing Partnership

     | Sep 08, 2011
    Beginning this month, Wiley-Blackwell will manage the production and distribution of The Reading Teacher, Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, and Reading Research Quarterly. IRA will continue to provide each journal with peer-reviewed, research-based content through its professional journal editors and review boards. All copyrights of journal content will continue to be owned by IRA. 

    What does this mean for IRA members? Print subscribers can expect the same high-quality IRA journals to be delivered each month, although the September print issue will arrive in mailboxes a little later than usual. In the coming months, online publication of the journals will transition from the Association's website (/) to the Wiley Online Library (onlinelibrary.wiley.com), which offers a number of technological enhancements that allow for more user customization and interaction with tablets and smartphones. 

    The September issue of The Reading Teacher is the first under Editors Diane Barone and Marla Mallette, featuring an all-new look and content. Please e-mail RT@/ to share your impressions. This issue of The Reading Teacher features contributions by Nell K. Duke, Nicole M. Martin, Roberta F. Schnorr, William P. Bintz, Sara D. Moore, Pam Wright, Lyndsie Dempsey, Kathy Ann Mills, Amanda Levido, Chase J. Young, Timothy V. Rasinski, Stephanie Wessels, Katrin L. Blamey, Katherine A. Beauchat, Frank Serafini, Katherine A. Dougherty Stahl, and Patricia L. Hardré.

    The Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy (JAAL) also features some new, practical features. Select JAAL articles now offer “Take Action!” sidebars of simple, step-by-step instructions to help you quickly get started using a teaching idea or strategy. “More to Explore” points you to books, articles, ReadWriteThink.org lessons, and even podcasts related to the topic of an article. “Toolbox” provides a variety of teaching and classroom management tips and a reproducible that is ready to use. “Spark” helps you to ignite your students’ literacy achievement. Some of your favorite authors and educators provide quick, practical tips that are based in research and tested in classrooms, plus a list of additional resources if you want to take the idea even further. 

    The September issue of JAAL includes submissions by Donald J. Leu, J. Gregory McVerry, W. Ian O’Byrne, Carita Kiili, Lisa Zawilinski, Heidi Everett-Cacopardo, Clint Kennedy, Elena Forzani, Amanda Haertling Thein, Megan Guise, DeAnn Long Sloan, Mellinee Lesley, Kathy A. Mills, Vinesh Chandra, Janette Hughes, Sue Dymoke, Ellen S. Friedland, Susan E. McMillen, Pixita del Prado Hill, Douglas Fisher, Diane Lapp, Nancy Frey, David O’Brien, Scott Voss, James Blasingame, April Brannon, Laura B. Turchi, Risha Mullins, Shelly Shaffer, Aron Jones, Ted Domers, and Garth Gagnier. Please send your views of the new journal to JAAL@/.

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    New Reading Today Magazine Launches

     | Sep 06, 2011
    Beginning with the August/September 2011 issue, Reading Today is no longer a newspaper. It is now a magazine with two components: the Reading Today print magazine (with an interactive digital version) and the Reading Today Online website. 

    The print component includes the 48-page, glossy Reading Today magazine which is mailed to members bi-monthly. It follows the same schedule as the newspaper did, with issues in August/September, October/November, December/January, February/March, April/May, and June/July. Online only members can view an interactive digital version of the latest print issue on the web. 

    Reading Today Online is updated daily with articles on the following topics: Articles on Reading Today Online are divided into six topics: Teaching Literacy, Children’s Literature, Councils & SIGs, Research & Grants, Legislation & Policy, and Member News. You can access articles one at a time by clicking on their links, or you can view all of the articles of a certain topic by clicking on that topic name. You can also view all of the articles in a list, shown in reverse-chronological order. If you especially enjoy a certain article, click on the sharing links at the bottom of its webpage. There are links to Facebook, Twitter, and more, as well as a link to share the article URL via email. Some articles even have “discuss on Engage” buttons that allow members to login to chat with other members about topics covered in the articles. 

    Why did we make these changes? First, we changed it to create a better value for IRA members. The dual channel approach lets us to flow more information to you over the course of the year. Second, IRA’s current strategic plan calls for increased internal and external communication. We have spent months connecting with members, councils, Special Interest Groups (SIGs), the board of directors, IRA staff, and more to create an open dialogue among literacy professionals. Finally, we need to realign our communications to account for the impact of new media and digital technologies. 

    “The magazine is designed for longer, deeper reads, while online articles are short and often time-sensitive,” says Director of Strategic Communications Dan Mangan. Online articles also include more references to websites and other online reading resources. Reading Today Online contains some articles from the print magazine, but most of the printed content is for IRA members only.  

    We are always looking for new story ideas. Click here to read the submission guidelines, and contact readingtoday@/ if you have questions. 

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