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  • IRA annual conventionJoin Cindy Lassonde and Kristine Tucker in San Antonio on April 19, 2013 for their institute about a dramatic re-visioning of literacy leadership.
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    Best Practices in Literacy Leadership Institute

     | Mar 07, 2013

    Institute 9: Best Practices in Literacy Leadership: Nurturing Development through Sustainable Learning and Creative Change

    cindy lassonde kristine tucker

    Reading Today Online asked all of the Institute Chairpersons for IRA San Antonio to respond to three questions designed to give our readers and all of the prospective attendees a better understanding of the insights and benefits they will gain from attending these day-long programs. Below are responses from Institute 9 Chairs Cindy Lassonde and Kristine Tucker.

    What is the professional urgency that this Institute is designed to address?

    Literacy leadership is contextualized by the realities of high-stakes testing, accountability measures, teacher development initiatives, data-driven literacy programs for K-12 students, acclimation to the new Common Core State Standards, and a shifting landscape regarding teacher evaluation procedures. Mirroring the super-charged pace of life in general, literacy leadership responds to the prioritizing and re-prioritizing of local, educational needs defined by 21st century college and career readiness goals. 

    But, what would happen if we took pause? What might result if within this pause we ask, "How might we perceive and build a different kind of literacy leadership pedagogy or praxis when 'need' is defined as nurturing the development of sustainable learning, creative change, and renewal?" 

    Working within a professional landscape increasingly defined by quantitative means necessitates the clearing of space for this kind of inquiry and exploration. Best Practices in Literacy Leadership: Nurturing Development through Sustainable Learning and Creative Change is a qualitative conversation and inquiry into what it means to be a literacy leader when “need” is reconsidered and defined as sustainable learning, creative change, and renewal.

    What types of literacy professionals is the Institute designed for?

    This institute is designed for anyone who identifies as a stakeholder in advancing literacy leadership. All voices are welcome.

    How will attendance at this Institute help those literacy professionals “make a difference” in their work?

    Best Practices in Literacy Leadership: Nurturing Development through Sustainable Learning and Creative Change celebrates educators as literacy leaders, adult learners, and agents of social change. This institute will change how literacy leaders conceptualize, approach, and engage literacy leadership as participants fold new tools and strategies into their developing repertoire. This institute offers a variety of practical leadership strategies to create responsive, respectful, and sustainable learning communities nurturing growth, development, and transformation.

    Registration Information: This preconference institute will be held at the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center in San Antonio, Texas from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Friday, April 19 before the 58th International Reading Association Annual Convention begins on Saturday, April 20. Register online for this or another institute and/or to register for the annual convention. Call 888-294-9167 or 415-979-2278 to find out how to register by phone, fax, or mail. To learn more about convention events in San Antonio, visit the annual convention website and the online itinerary planner (iPlanner), or read more Reading Today annual convention articles.

     

     

     

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  • joan williamsJoin Joan Williams in San Antonio on April 19, 2013 for a comprehensive session on meeting the challenges of struggling readers.
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    Struggling Readers Institute

     | Mar 06, 2013

    Sold Out!

    Institute 14: Listening to the Voices of Struggling Readers and Writers: What They Want Educators to Know

    joan williams

    Joan Williams

    Reading Today Online asked all of the Institute Chairpersons for IRA San Antonio to respond to three questions designed to give our readers and all of the prospective attendees a better understanding of the insights and benefits they will gain from attending these day-long programs. Below are responses from Institute 14 Chair Joan Williams from Sam Houston State University. 

    What is the professional urgency that this Institute is designed to address?

    In almost every classroom in the United States, there are students who struggle with reading and writing. This fact is well documented.  Do we look at the challenges of these students as a glass half empty or do we consider their incredible strengths in problem solving, critical thinking, and comprehension? This institute will concentrate on the voices of these students and ways to honor their contributions as we support their challenges with literacy.

    What types of literacy professionals is this Institute designed for?

    Institute 14 will be beneficial to many levels of educators, including elementary and secondary teachers, administrators, language arts coordinators, reading specialists, dyslexia specialists, Title I teachers, and university educators.

    How will attendance at this Institute help those literacy professionals “make a difference” in their work?

    Institute 14 will assist literacy professionals in making a difference in their work in several ways.

    Three keynote addresses will be given throughout the day from well-known and respected scholars in the field of literacy education:

    • Keynote I will be given by Donalyn Miller, the author of The Book Whisperer;
    • Keynote II will be given by Dr. Richard Allington, well known scholar in the field of  struggling readers;
    • Keynote III will be given by Dr. Hannah Gerber from SHSU, who will talk about understanding learning spaces available in our digital culture.

    There are also ten breakout sessions throughout the day that will examine from multiple perspectives the issues and strengths of students who are challenged by literacy:

    • Listening to the Voices of Struggling Students
    • The Case for Sensible Fluency Development
    • Dyslexia and Retention
    • The Power of Performing Text as a Motivational Tool
    • Giving Voice to Second Language Writers
    • What Struggling Writers Want Educators to Know
    • Tools for Independent Reading
    • What Struggling Readers and Writers Want Principals to Know
    • Language Learning in Virtual Communities
    • What Educators Need to Know about Informational Writing and Struggling Students

    Registration Information: Yes, the institutes do sell out! If you are interested in this institute, you may also like Institute 13: Making a Difference through Writing: The Other "R" in Literacy or many of the other institutes offered. Preconference institutes will be held at the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center in San Antonio, Texas from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Friday, April 19 before the 58th International Reading Association Annual Convention begins on Saturday, April 20. Register online for an institute and/or to register for the annual convention. Call 888-294-9167 or 415-979-2278 to find out how to register by phone, fax, or mail. To learn more about convention events in San Antonio, visit the annual convention website and the online itinerary planner (iPlanner), or read more Reading Today annual convention articles.

     

     

     

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  • kathy ganskeWriting Institute Chair Kathy Ganske gives you the "long and short" of why you should register for Making a Difference through Writing on April 19.
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    The Long and the Short of Why You Should Come to Our Institute on Making a Difference through Writing: The Other “R” in Literacy

     | Mar 05, 2013

    kathy ganskeby Kathy Ganske

    For Readers in a Hurry, Here’s the Twitter-Like Version

    The new Common Core State Standards place major emphasis on writing. Yet concern about students’ writing achievement and its potential impact on the individual and society are well-documented. To help professionals prepare students for the writing demands associated with the CCSS—language arts, content area, and assessments—we need to develop their expertise. Toward that end, we have a stellar line-up of keynoters and breakout-session leaders (see long version) that span the K-8 range and include regular education and special education. Come spend a stimulating day with us!

    The Long Version of Why You Should Come to the Writing Institute

    Reading is just one part of literacy, but writing is another. As with reading, concerns have been expressed about children’s achievement in writing and the impact of low achievement on their lives and ultimately society as a whole, e.g., National Assessment of Educational Progress, 2007; National Commission on Writing for America’s Families, Schools, and Colleges, 2003; and the Report on Writing  in the 21st Century (Yancey, 2009).

    Although writing was not one of the National Reading Panel’s “five pillars” (NICHD, 2000), it is a significant part of the Common Core State Standards. Its role in the curriculum as outlined in the Standards encompasses literacy learning, content learning, evaluation of student reading performance, and in some states, evaluation of content knowledge, such as mathematics. The inclusion of writing in the Standards has increased attention on writing and the need for teachers, administrators, and others who work with students to know more about writing and how to teach writing effectively. In light of this, it is essential that professionals at this conference be able to develop their expertise in this area.

    Our institute Making a Difference through Writing: The Other "R" in Literacy (institute number 13) will be of interest to K-8 classroom teachers, both inservice and preservice, literacy coaches and specialists, special education teachers, administrators, teacher educators, and undergraduate and graduate students.

    This institute is all about making a difference, and a key to bringing that about is knowledge of the what, the why, and the how. The institute provides an avenue for teachers and educational leaders to expand their knowledge about a) the role of writing in students’ literacy learning, b) the critical importance of structuring environments that motivate and support writers, and c) research-based strategies and techniques to effectively develop the writing expertise of typical and challenged learners of various ages from kindergarten through middle school. By drawing on notable experts in the field of writing, all of whom have published in their areas of expertise, this institute will provide not only critical professional development but also professional development that represents current thinking from research and pedagogical perspectives, with strong support from case and classroom.

    We’ll develop participants’ understandings through:

    1. Keynote Addresses by leading experts who will draw on research and first-hand experience to build knowledge about developing effective and engaged writers and teachers of writing. These include:

    • Tim Shanahan, Writing: Regaining Its Place in the Curriculum
      No Child Left Behind emphasized research-based reading instruction, but largely ignored the teaching of writing. With the heavy emphasis on writing in the new Common Core State Standards this neglect has been reversed, with writing taking on perhaps the most prominent role it has ever held in U.S. literacy curriculum. This presentation will explore and explain the changes face teachers as writing regains its place in the curriculum.
    • Ralph Fletcher, Engaging Boy Writers
      Many indicators point to the fact that boys are struggling in our writing classrooms. This keynote will explore how we can better understand boy writers: their quirks, strengths, weaknesses. We'll look at specific ways we can widen the circle and create boy-friendlier writing classrooms. Writing teachers need to give boys more options but, at the same time, give them information about craft that can help them grow into stronger
      writers.
    • Steve Graham, 10 Things Teachers Should Know about Writing, Writing Instruction, and the Common Core
      This keynote will draw upon young writer’s voices, the wisdom of professional writers, and empirical scientific research to establish the importance of social context, motivation, knowledge of writing and genre, fundamental writing skills, and strategic prowess to establish 10 principles critical to the teaching of writing. The convergence and non-convergence of these principles with the Common Core State Standards will also be explored.
    • Georgia Heard, Growing Readers and Writers Who LOVE Poetry
      Poet laureate Billy Collins lamented in his poem “Introduction to Poetry” that people sometimes “tie a poem to a chair,” attempting to torture meaning out of it. Often students don’t get to read or write much poetry, or we leave the reading of poetry to test prep. Georgia Heard will share how we can grow readers and writers of poetry throughout the school year who understand poetry's meaning as well as its heart and soul.

    2. 90-Minute Interactive Breakout Sessions that provide participants with opportunity to learn and try out strategies/activities/techniques that they may later use in their own classrooms to develop engaged and effective student writers. There will be two breakout series, each with three different breakout offerings so that participants can choose sessions that fit their interests and grade range of learners.

    Series I Breakouts will be conducted by:

    • Matt Glover, Nurturing Young Writers: Beliefs and Practices
      Young children are capable of incredible thinking, which can be seen in their writing when they see themselves as writers and when adults honor children’s approximations of writing. Using video clips and writing samples, participants will examine key beliefs about young writers. This session will provide participants with practical, developmentally appropriate strategies that support young children as writers. In addition, participants will learn how these beliefs about young writers translate into instructional practices in early childhood classrooms.
    • Kathy Ganske, Building Knowledge, Motivation, Collaboration, and Writing Expertise through Multi-Genre Projects
      Writing climate is crucial in the development of writers. It can motivate or stagnate writers. This workshop will engage participants in exploring collaborative zine-writing, a highly motivating project that can serve as a way to develop and reinforce students’ writing in different genres, connect writing to texts, and build content knowledge, while tapping into students’ interests. Hands-on learning and artifact sharing will be part of the session.
    • Thomas DeVere Wolsey, Using Technology to Support Writing as a Complex Activity within the Disciplines
      In this session, participants will explore two aspects of working in digital environments: How to work with digital sources to inform their writing and How to bring together digital images and composing processes, as means for increasing language learning. Participants will learn how to use online tools their students can employ to draw or reuse images found on the Internet in service of writing as a means of learning. Examples of digital stories that combine images and words will be provided, and participants with computers or smartphones will have the opportunity to try some of the tools. By linking the parts of the brain that process images with those parts that process language, written work improves and so does student learning.

    Series II Breakouts will be conducted by:

    • Lisa C. Miller, Make Me a Story: Teaching Writing through Digital Storytelling
      In this session we’ll talk about the elements of a successful digital story: an interesting question the story answers; a clear point of view; impact; economy; the power of a student’s voice; art that helps tell the story; the sound track. We’ll also discuss the role of writing in digital storytelling. When you take students through the process of creating a digital story, you’re taking them through the writing process. The computers allow students to throw in lots of bells and whistles. But if authors of digital stories don’t do the writing, don’t take the time to draft and revise their scripts, then they don’t get to the deep thinking we all need to do to tell the best stories.
    • Karen H. Harris, Powerful Writing Strategies for All Students, Especially Those Who Struggle with Writing
      Children with challenges in composing need support not only in the development of skills, but also in developing composition strategies, understandings about the writing process, self-regulation of the writing process, and positive attitudes about themselves as writers. The role of and major components in evidence-based strategies instruction in writing will be discussed, with examples at the elementary and middle school levels. Materials available to support instruction will be emphasized.
    • Lynne Dorfman and Rose Cappelli, Using Mentor Texts to Move Students Forward in Writing
      How can we help students become independent, confident writers across the curriculum? This workshop will focus on the use of children’s literature to teach narrative and informational writing skills. The concept of mentorship and how books and authors can serve as mentors will be explored. The presenters will use interactive strategies and a variety of rich literature models to show how teachers can help students integrate aspects of the craft of mentor authors into their own writing.

    3. Other Modes including PowerPoint presentations, demonstration and modeling, explicit connections to relevant Common Core Standards, video- and internet-clip examples, classroom artifacts, handouts, etc. In addition there will be Q & A time at the end of each breakout.

    Opportunities to interact with other professionals and to enjoy learning are sure to be part of this institute as well. We hope you’ll join us!

    Schedule for the Day

    • Welcome/Overview - Kathy Ganske
    • Keynote: Writing: Regaining Its Place in the Curriculum - Timothy Shanahan, University of Illinois at Chicago
    • Keynote: Engaging Boy Writers - Ralph Fletcher, Author/Consultant, Sponsored by Stenhouse
    • Coffee Break
    • Breakout Series I:  
      Strand A (Grades K-3) - Nurturing Young Writers: Beliefs and Practices - Matt Glover, Author/Consultant
      Strand B (Grades 3-6) - Building Knowledge, Motivation, Collaboration, and Writing Expertise through Multi-Genre Projects - Kathy Ganske, Vanderbilt University
      Strand C (Grades 5-8) - Using Technology to Support Writing as a Complex Activity Within the Disciplines - Thomas DeVere Wolsey
    • LUNCH on your own
    • Keynote: 10 Things Every Teacher Should Know About Writing, Writing Instruction, and Common Core - Steve Graham, Arizona State University
    • Breakout Series II:    
      Strand A (Grades K-3) - Make Me a Story: Teaching Writing through Digital Storytelling - Lisa C. Miller, University of New Hampshire
      Strand B (Grades 3-8) - Powerful Writing Strategies for All Students, Especially Those Who Struggle with Writing - Karen Harris, Arizona State University
      Strand C (Grades K-6) - Using Mentor Texts to Move Students Forward in Writing - Lynne Dorfman, The Pennsylvania Writing and Literature Project, West Chester
      University and Rose Cappelli, West Chester Area School District
    • Keynote: Growing Readers and Writers Who Love Poetry - Georgia Heard, Author/Consultant, Sponsored by Scholastic
    • Closing Remarks - Kathy Ganske

    Registration Information: This preconference institute will be held at the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center in San Antonio, Texas from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Friday, April 19 before the 58th International Reading Association Annual Convention begins on Saturday, April 20. Register online for this or another institute and/or to register for the annual convention. Call 888-294-9167 or 415-979-2278 to find out how to register by phone, fax, or mail. To learn more about convention events in San Antonio, visit the annual convention website and the online itinerary planner (iPlanner), or read more Reading Today annual convention articles.

     

     

     

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  • ITENIRA and the Organization of American States worked together on a webinar series through the Inter-American Teacher Education Network.
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    Inter-American Teacher Education Network Webinars Foster Forum for Teachers

    by Yesly Contreras, IRA and Monica de la Garza, OAS
     | Mar 04, 2013
    Adelina Arellano Osuna
    Adelina Arellano
    Osuna

    Paul Boyd-Batstone
    Paul Boyd-Batstone

    Oscar J. Martinez-Alaniz
    Oscar J.
    Martinez-Alaniz


    Last November, the International Reading Association and the Organization of American States (OAS) held a webinar series titled, “Innovative Literacy Teaching Techniques” through OAS’s Inter-American Teacher Education Network (ITEN). 

    ITEN is a professional network of leaders in education in the Americas interested in sharing knowledge, experiences, research and good practices in the field of teacher education, based on a strategy of horizontal cooperation.

    The presenters of the webinar series were both volunteers and members of IRA. The presenters were Dr. Adelina Arellano Osuna, a literacy research at the University of Los Andes in Bogota; Dr. Paul Boyd-Batstone, a reading and writing professor at the California State University, Long Beach; and Dr. Oscar J. Martinez-Alaniz, an English professor at the Cervantes College CA, Mexico. The webinar series was held on the 13th and 26th of July and on the 10th of August of 2012.

    More than 100 teachers participated in OAS’s ITEN and IRA webinar series. The idea of the webinar series was initiated by Mrs. Kelly Dwyer of the organization Teach a Teacher in Caraz, Ancash, Peru. Originally, the participants were going to be teachers from Peru but many other teachers from all over Latin America participated. OAS- ITEN have had many webinars since it was launched in June of 2011, but the OAS-IRA webinar series was the one that reached a record by having more than 100 participants in a webinar. 

    ITEN WebinarThe webinar series’ forum currently has 870 members and is one of the most popular groups of the community. The topic has generated such an interest that even other teachers that have not attended the workshop are participating actively of the forums and wall of comments. The wall comment currently has more than 18 pages of comments shared by members. The OAS and IRA are planning to have many more webinar series coming up with the help of IRA’s members.

    For more information on IRA-OAS webinar series or for further information on the webinars and the initiatives by ITEN please visit:
    http://riedamericas.net/group/serie-de-webinars-ira/page/serie-de-webinars-ried-ira and http://www.oas.org/en/iten/

    ITEN Webinar

    ITEN Webinar

    ITEN Webinar

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  • david d paigeJoin Dr. David D. Paige for a comprehensive look at how to jumpstart effective fluency instruction in preparation for Common Core assessments.
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    Institute on the Role of Fluency in the Common Core

     | Feb 28, 2013

    Institute 11: The Role of Fluency in the Common Core: Viewing Fluency as a Developmental Continuum for Literacy Achievement

    david d paige
    David D. Paige

    Reading Today Online asked all of the Institute Chairpersons for IRA San Antonio to respond to three questions designed to give our readers and all prospective attendees a better understanding of the insights and benefits they will gain from attending these day-long programs. Below are responses from Institute 11 Chair David D. Paige.

    What is the professional urgency that this institute is designed to address?

    A “Reading Tsunami” is coming soon! With the implementation of the Common Core across the country, knowledgeable administrators and teachers are beginning to recognize the importance of effective fluency in all readers. More urgently, the quickly approaching “Reading Tsunami” in the form of the assessment of complex text in the Common Core suggests that students with inadequate fluency skills will very likely struggle. Evidence suggests that inadequate fluency skills including little reading stamina, poorly developed word identification skills, and languid automaticity with text will result in poor ability to construct meaning. In other words, reading scores may well decrease before they get better! “Fluency and the Common Core” will provide attendees with a jump-start on the knowledge and tools to implement effective fluency instruction in their districts and schools.

    What types of literacy professionals is this institute designed for?

    Content teachers, reading teachers, special education teachers, and literacy coaches from elementary, middle, and high school will benefit from this institute. Central office personnel responsible for reading initiatives across the district will also benefit through a deeper understanding of how fluency instruction should fit into the larger curriculum. Undergraduate and graduate students will gain understanding of reading fluency and its importance in effective reading instruction from national experts.

    How will attendance at this institute help those literacy professionals “make a difference” in their work?

    Those attending this institute will take away the following “difference makers” that will help in their work with students:

    1. Greater understanding of the role that fluent reading plays for students at all grade levels
    2. The demands of the Common Core relative to reading fluency and complex text
    3. Specific strategies that can be employed across elementary, middle, and high school to encourage the development of fluent reading in students.

    Registration Information: This preconference institute will be held at the Grand Hyatt in San Antonio, Texas from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Friday, April 19 before the 58th International Reading Association Annual Convention begins on Saturday, April 20. Register online for this or another institute and/or to register for the annual convention. Call 888-294-9167 or 415-979-2278 to find out how to register by phone, fax, or mail. To learn more about convention events in San Antonio, visit the annual convention website and the online itinerary planner (iPlanner), or read more Reading Today annual convention articles.

     

     

     

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