NCTE 2022 Spring Catalog

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JOURNALS

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MEMBERSHIP

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EVENTS

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BOOKS

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Become a member of the NCTE Community and create your own adventure. There’s something for everyone at NCTE.

Dear Reader, Greetings from NCTE. We are living and teaching in a time like no other, so we know that it’s critically important that our content meet you where you are. This catalog presents opportunities to dive into key issues such as trauma-informed teaching, racial literacy, and critical media literacy through NCTE’s new Special Issues series. New books on teaching through film and theater are ready to help you embrace storytelling and new possibilities in literacy. We also have exciting new titles rooted in culturally affirming teaching practices and the social-emotional needs of your students. And be sure to check out our quick-reference guides (QRGs), including a new one on antibias and antiracist teaching, and capture a free download opportunity of a QRG on teaching with primary sources, courtesy of NCTE’s partnership with the United States Library of Congress (see page 16)! As always, we’d be honored to have you share your experiences with us. We invite you to attend our many events, build your professional resources library, search our ReadWriteThink site for lessons and other teacher-created content, and watch videos of recent NCTE member events. And if you’re not already a member, join NCTE, the professional home for teachers of English and language arts. May our spring be filled with renewal, Emily Kirkpatrick Executive Director

ATTEND NCTE EVENTS: NCTE offers in-person and virtual opportunities to connect and learn with educators all throughout the year. https://ncte.org/events/

EXPLORE NCTE’S VIDEO LIBRARY: This NCTE member benefit offers more than 100 recordings of recent learning sessions, author talks, book talks, and more. https://library.ncte.org/video-library

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CONTENTS New & Coming Soon!

2-5

Principles in Practice

6-13

Grammar

JOIN NCTE: When you become a member of NCTE, you’ll be joining the best minds in English, language arts, and writing studies. https://ncte.org/membership/

Quick-Reference Guides

16-20

Writing

21-26

Composition

27-28

Literature & Reading

29-31

Supporting English Learners

32-33

Culturally Affirming Teaching

34-36

Social-Emotional Learning Journals Special Issues Series ®

BUILD YOUR STACK: NCTE’s Build Your Stack® initiative focuses exclusively on helping teachers build their book knowledge and their classroom libraries. https://ncte.org/build-your-stack/

14-15

37 38-41 42

Curriculum Connections

43-45

High School Literature Series

46-47

Shakespeare

48-49

Poetry Media & Digital Literacies

50-51 52

Professional Learning & Support

53-55

Studies in Writing & Rhetoric Series

56-58

Author/Editor Index

59

Title Index

60

FIND CLASSROOM RESOURCES: NCTE’s ReadWriteThink.org platform offers powerful tools for teaching reading and language arts in grades K–12, vetted and classroom tested by students and teachers. https://www.readwritethink.org/

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NEW & Coming Soon! ABOUT THE SPECIAL ISSUES SERIES Teachers and students across the country are grappling with several important issues. Almost daily, we hear from educators who are looking for practical and engaging approaches to racial literacy, critical media literacy, and trauma-informed teaching. NCTE is responding to these needs with our new Special Issues series designed to directly address these pressing topics in K–12 and college classrooms today. Edited by expert practitioners in the field, the first volumes offer a carefully curated collection of articles from across all of NCTE’s journals in one easy-to-reference book. Each article has been enhanced with teaching tips to help immediately implement these approaches in classrooms. Subsequent volumes will feature newly written contributions. $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Special Issues, Volume 1: Racial Literacy Implications for Curriculum, Pedagogy, and Policy Detra Price-Dennis, editor This first volume of Special Issues: Racial Literacy gathers some of the most compelling and practical recent articles across NCTE journals, addressing the importance of racial literacy and its implications for curriculum, pedagogy, and policy. Editor Detra Price-Dennis has curated this collection to show how teaching from a racial literacy perspective is in conversation with antiracist, culturally responsive, equityoriented frameworks that uplift curriculum design and instructional strategies. These articles can help educators (re)imagine the classroom as a space that supports the development of racial literacy skills and practices with their students. 171 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814144923 | ebook: ISBN 9780814144930

Special Issues, Volume 1: Critical Media Literacy Bringing Lives to Texts Tom Liam Lynch, editor Critical media literacy is not a single star burning brightly in the night sky. It is more like a constellation, a collection of stars that tell a story about how educators engage with young people through an array of communicative modes in the spirit of inquiry, society, and action. Edited by Tom Liam Lynch, this collection of essays drawn from NCTE’s many journals provides an excellent starting point for teachers who want to bring critical media literacy into their K–12 and college classrooms. 178 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814144893 | ebook: ISBN 9780814144916

Special Issues, Volume 1: Trauma-Informed Teaching Cultivating Healing-Centered ELA Classrooms Sakeena Everett, editor This first volume of Special Issues: Trauma-Informed Teaching gathers some of the most compelling and practical recent articles across NCTE journals, addressing the importance of trauma-informed teaching and its recent developments in the field. Editor Sakeena Everett has curated this collection to show how to help K–college teachers integrate the most up-to-date approaches to trauma-informed teaching into their particular classroom environments. In this volume, you will find valuable insights, diverse perspectives, innovative and exciting pedagogies, as well as thought-provoking research methodologies that engage micro- and macro-level supports you need to get started today. 183 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814144947 | ebook: ISBN 9780814144954

Antibias and Antiracist Teaching QRG The Time Is Always Now Damián Baca, Kathleen Colantonio-Yurko, Lorena Germán, Richard Gorham, Patrick Harris, Keisha Rembert, and Holly Spinelli Drawing on ideas from critical race theory, the Learning for Justice Anchor Standards, and resources created by NCTE's Committee Against Racism and Bias in the Teaching of English, this quick-reference guide offers K–12 ELA educators practical approaches to teaching about antibias and antiracism. Features include two sample lessons, tips on ways to build community between students and educators, and suggested readings for students and for educators’ professional learning. 6 pp. | 2022 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9780814186404 | $10.39 member/$12.99 nonmember 2

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Toward a BlackBoyCrit Pedagogy Black Boys, Male Teachers, and Early Childhood Classroom Practices Nathaniel Bryan Critical and necessary, this book provides a window into the education and lives of Black boys in early childhood settings. Drawing on Black Critical Theory and Black Male Studies, and applying portraiture methodology, Bryan introduces BlackBoyCrit Pedagogy to explore experiences of Black boys and their male teachers in ways that affirm their humanity and acknowledge the consequences of existing in a white supremacist system. NCTE-Routledge Research Series 184 pp. | 2021 | Grades PreK–3 | ISBN 9780367254032 $36.71 member/$48.95 nonmember

Critical Race English Education New Visions, New Possibilities Lamar L. Johnson Foreword by Gloria Boutte Afterword by David Stovall Johnson’s visionary and much-needed book is a call for the transformation of English education to embrace rather than reject Blackness. Employing an original framework, Critical Race English Education, Johnson reveals how English education and ELA classrooms are dominated by eurocentric language and literacy practices, and provides a justice-oriented framework that combats anti-Black racism. Critical Race English Education is a movement for Black lives. NCTERoutledge Research Series 162 pp. | 2022 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780367276423 $36.71 member/$48.95 nonmember

Transformational Sanctuaries in the Middle Level ELA Classroom Creating Truth Spaces for Black Girls Dywanna E. Smith Drawing from an arts-based research and humanizing methodologies, Smith documents transformative and liberatory spaces in ELA middle level classrooms, where students address and counteract discrimination, colorism, sizism, and body shaming. Grounded in an original qualitative study of adolescent Black girls, this book examines how such “truth spaces” serve as a medium for adolescents to self-examine their intersectional identities and give voice to their resilience in the face of marginalization. Incorporating original narratives, including the author’s self-actualizing verse novel and the voices of Black female students, Smith shines a light on new culturally sustaining pedagogies and offers much-needed implications for practice. NCTE-Routledge Research Series 190 pp. | 2022 | Grades 6–9 | ISBN 9780367355449 $36.71 member/$48.95 nonmember

Where Is the Justice? Engaged Pedagogies in Schools and Communities Valerie Kinloch, Emily A. Nemeth, Tamara T. Butler, and Grace D. Player This inspirational book is about engaged pedagogies, an approach to teaching and learning that centers dialogue, listening, equity, and connection among stakeholders who understand the human and ecological cost of inequality. Book Features: ● Provides a sound approach to

deeply taking up the work of justice and engaged pedagogies. ● Presents linguistic, cultural,

theoretical, and practical ideas that can be used and implemented immediately. ● Includes reflective questions,

found poetry, lesson ideas, storytelling as narrative, and examples of engaged pedagogies. ● Shares stories from a district-

wide initiative that embedded engaged pedagogies within classrooms, counseling offices, and libraries. ● Showcases original artwork and

images in full color by Grace D. Player, one of the coauthors. Copublished by Teachers College Press and NCTE. 192 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College ISBN 9780807765999 $29.56 member/$36.95 nonmember

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NEW & Coming Soon! On the Case in the English Language Arts Classroom

What Works in Grammar Instruction

Situations for the Teaching of English

Deborah Dean In this friendly and practical book, veteran teacher educator Deborah Dean provides vignettes of classroom conversations to show what teaching grammar in context can look like in action; supplements the vignettes with descriptions of classroom practices to help teachers try out the ideas with their own students; and addresses issues such as helping English language learners and native speakers navigate formal, academic English, especially in the context of testing. 177 pp. | 2022 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814156834 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814156841

Materiality and Writing Studies Aligning Labor, Scholarship, and Teaching Holly Hassel and Cassandra Phillips This expansive look at the discipline of writing studies argues for the centering of the field’s research and service on first-year writing, particularly the new majority of college students and those who teach them. Drawing from a study of 78, two-year college student writers and an analysis of nearly two decades of issues of the major journals in the field of writing studies, Hassel and Phillips sketch out a reimagined vision for writing studies that roots the scholarship, research, and service in the discipline squarely within the changing material realities of contemporary college writing instruction. CCCC Studies in Writing & Rhetoric (SWR) Series 258 pp. | 2022 | College | ISBN 9780814130841 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814130858

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Thomas M. McCann, Elizabeth A. Kahn, Sarah Hochstetler, and Dianne Chambers Foreword by Peter Smagorinsky Being a high school English teacher is both rewarding and difficult. Although teacher education programs try to be thorough, they can’t prepare preservice teachers for every situation that might arise. For instance: ● How can an ELA teacher work with learners who have suffered

significant trauma? ● How can a well-prepared literature instructor teach high

school students the basics of reading? ● Should a teacher shy away from classroom conversations

because they can become “too political”? ● How does a teacher contend with a crushing workload?

Four veteran teacher educators offer twenty case narratives as well as a format for discussion, professional resources that can inform decisions, and a guide to constructing new case narratives that can expand the possibilities for developing powerful problem-solving strategies. 150 pp. | 2022 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814134214 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814134238

English Studies Reimagined A New Context for Linguistics, Rhetoric and Composition, Creative Writing, Literature, Cultural Studies, and English Education Bruce McComiskey, editor As much of English studies remains entrenched in nationalist discourses, McComiskey and the contributors to this volume argue that English studies must shift from a national to a global orientation in order to remain relevant. This sequel to McComiskey’s 2006 edited collection English Studies: An Introduction to the Discipline(s) features chapters by Jacquelyn Rahman (linguistics), Victor Villanueva (rhetoric and composition), Sarah Sandman (creative writing), Richard C. Taylor (literature and literary criticism), Jeffrey J. Williams (critical theory and cultural studies), and Tonya B. Perry (English education). 210 pp. | 2022 | College | ISBN 9780814115411 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814115435

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Using Film to Unlock Textual Literacy A Teacher's Guide Robert Bryant Crisp Struggling to help students engage with print texts? Looking for ways to help them learn to analyze texts deeply in a hands-on, differentiated, and real-world environment? Using Film to Unlock Textual Literacy explores strategies for using film study and filmmaking to help students engage in entirely new ways with both print and digital texts. From basic team building, storyboarding, and filmingwith-your-phone-camera activities to deeper dives into adapting texts, making directorial choices, and guiding audience response through texts, Crisp proves that you can teach film study even without specialized training. Texts incorporated into lessons include “Casey at the Bat,” 42, E. T., “Everyday Use,” Othello, Edward Scissorhands, “The Cremation of Sam McGee,” Unbroken, and more. Resources include a list of film vocabulary, observation charts and rubrics, storyboard templates, and sample film technique assessments. 241 pp. | 2021 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814154465 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814154472

Teaching Macbeth A Differentiated Approach

Available April 2022

Lyn Fairchild Hawks Macbeth, a story of ambition, terror, and conscience, speaks to our students and our era. Through differentiated instruction, Lyn Fairchild Hawks offers ways to engage all students with different readiness levels and interests. With lessons highlighting key scenes, film analysis activities, close reading assignments, and preassessments and summative assessments, this guide offers a wide range of exciting options to challenge your learners. With independent reading matches linked by theme, activities and projects mirroring professional roles, and relevance hooks to meet students’ interests, Macbeth can come alive for all students. Included are DIY tips for lesson design and a companion website with over 40 ready-to-use handouts. 280 pp. | 2022 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814151812 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814151228

Theater, Drama, and Reading Transforming the Rehearsal Process into a Reading Process Judith Freeman Garey Foreword by Sheridan Blau Drawing on both the production aspects of theater and the generative learning elements of drama, Garey shows readers how to transform text from print to interaction, establishing a simple framework for how to read as an actor who builds characters’ lives, a set designer who constructs context, and a director who generates action. This significant and practical new resource for all language arts teachers provides step-by-step examples from classroom practice, and clearly demonstrates how the strategies achieve the Common Core State Standards. Additionally, the book defines a unique approach to teaching dramatic literature, features a short overview of additional popular classroom drama strategies to engage students with written text, and integrates practical suggestions to convert all of these strategies to online instruction. 197 pp. | 2021 | Grades 7–College | ISBN 9780814153635 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814153659

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Books in the Principles in Practice imprint offer teachers concrete illustrations of effective classroom practices based in NCTE research briefs and policy statements. Each book discusses the research on a specific topic, links the research to an NCTE brief or policy statement, and then demonstrates how those principles come alive in practice: by showcasing actual classroom practices that demonstrate the policies in action; by talking about research in practical, teacher-friendly language; and by offering teachers possibilities for rethinking their own practices in light of the ideas presented in the books. Books within the imprint are grouped in strands, with each strand focused on a significant topic of interest. Strands: Adolescent Literacy | Writing in Today’s Classrooms | Literacy Assessment | Literacies of the Disciplines Reading in Today’s Classrooms | Teaching English Language Learners | Students’ Rights to Read and Write Imprint Editor: Cathy Fleischer

Restorative Justice in the English Language Arts Classroom Maisha T. Winn, Hannah Graham, and Rita Renjitham Alfred

“A transformative book. If this book is on your to-read list, move it to the top!” —Jessica Variz, Redondo Union High School The authors—two teacher educators and a restorative justice practitioner—provide concrete and specific examples of how English teachers can think and plan using a restorative justice lens to address issues of student disconnection and alienation; adult and youth well-being in schools; and inequity and racial justice through writing, reading, speaking, and action. They examine the intersection of restorative justice and education with a focus on restorative justice processes that are used to promote inclusivity and ownership, and demonstrate how teachers can use their curricular powers with a restorative justice framework in mind to empower the literacy classroom as a space for addressing inequalities across domains. 126 pp. | 2019 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814141014 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814141021

Growing Writers Principles for High School Writers and Their Teachers Anne Elrod Whitney Anne Elrod Whitney explores how the principles defined in NCTE’s Professional Knowledge for the Teaching of Writing position statement can support high school writers and teachers of writing. Principles help us to better understand our teaching purposes, make decisions about teaching, vet ideas supplied by others, and grow as teachers of writing. The book, part of the Writing in Today’s Classrooms strand of the Principles in Practice imprint, includes snapshots from high school teachers working in a variety of settings illustrating how their own classroom practice has helped both them and their students to grow. 151 pp. | 2021 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814119174 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814119181

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Students' Rights to Read and Write

In the Pursuit of Justice Students’ Rights to Read and Write in Elementary School Mariana Souto-Manning, editor Promoting equitable, inclusive, and plural understandings of literacy, Mariana SoutoManning and eight New York City public school teachers explore how elementary teachers can welcome into their classrooms the voices, values, language practices, stories, and experiences of their students who have been minoritized by dominant curricula, cultivating reading and writing experiences that showcase children’s varied skills and rich practices. Readers are invited to enter classrooms where teachers have engaged with the principles detailed in two NCTE position statements—NCTE Beliefs about the Students’ Right to Write and The Students’ Right to Read—in the pursuit of justice. Collectively, their experiences show that when teachers view the communities their students come from as assets to and in school, children not only thrive academically, but they also gain confidence in themselves as learners and develop a critical consciousness. Together, stepping into their power, they seek to right historical and contemporary wrongs as they commit to changing the world. 128 pp. | 2020 | Grades K–5 | ISBN 9780814148204 | ebook: ISBN 9780814148211 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Adventurous Thinking Fostering Students’ Rights to Read and Write in Secondary ELA Classrooms Mollie V. Blackburn, editor Focusing on high school English language arts classes, Adventurous Thinking draws from the work of seven teachers from across the country to illustrate how advocating for students’ rights to read and write can be revolutionary work. Focal topics include immigration, linguistic diversity, religious diversity, the Black Lives Matter movement, interrogating privilege, LGBTQ+ people, and people with physical disabilities and mental illness. Following these teachers’ accounts is an interview with Angie Thomas, author of The Hate U Give and On the Come Up, and an essay by Millie Davis, former director of NCTE’s Intellectual Freedom Center. The closing essay reflects on provocative curriculum and pedagogy, criticality, community, and connections. 136 pp. | 2019 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814100714 | ebook: ISBN 9780814100721 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Already Readers and Writers Honoring Students’ Rights to Read and Write in the Middle Grade Classroom Jennifer Ochoa, editor Veteran middle school teacher Jennifer Ochoa wants to help all middle school educators encourage their students to build literate lives that extend beyond the classroom. To that end, she brings together the experiences and activities of middle school teachers and teacher leaders, children’s author Ellen Oh, children’s literature scholar Kristin McIllhaga, and censorship expert Millie Davis to examine current middle school literacy practices that support students’ rights to read and write. Using NCTE position statements— The Students Right to Read and NCTE Beliefs about the Students’ Right to Write—as foundational guiding documents, Ochoa and her colleagues make the case that even in today’s standards-driven environment, authentic reading and writing practices can create literacy-rich middle school classrooms. 172 pp. | 2020 | Grades 6–8 | ISBN 9780814101155 | ebook: ISBN 9780814101179 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

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Literacy Assessment

Going Public with Assessment A Community Practice Approach Kathryn Mitchell Pierce and Rosario Ordoñez-Jasis Veteran educators Pierce and Ordoñez-Jasis share classroom vignettes, strategies, and resources for “going public” with literacy assessment through teacher collaboration with colleagues, families, and the community. Drawing from the IRA– NCTE Standards for the Assessment of Reading and Writing, Revised Edition, and their own extensive experience, the authors have compiled a set of collaborative assessment principles, as well as a model for teacher professional development around assessment, to guide teachers from assessment theory to practical implementation in the classroom. Teachers have up-close and personal experiences with how assessments impact their students. Their critical expertise is strengthened by the experiences and expertise of others invested in the success of our students—colleagues, families, communities, and students themselves. 153 pp. | 2018 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9780814118634 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814118658

Reading Assessment Artful Teachers, Successful Students Diane Stephens, editor Through case studies of individual students and lively portraits of elementary classrooms, editor Diane Stephens and colleagues explore how artful preK–5 teachers come to know their students through assessment and use that knowledge to customize reading instruction. Throughout the book, the educators profiled—classroom teachers, reading specialists, and literacy coaches—work together to take personal and professional responsibility for knowing their students and ensuring that every child becomes a successful reader. The teachers profiled detail the assessment tools they use, how they make sense of the data they collect, and how they use that information to inform instruction. Like the other books in the Literacy Assessment strand of NCTE’s Principles in Practice imprint, Reading Assessment is based on the IRA–NCTE Standards for the Assessment of Reading and Writing, Revised Edition, which outlines the elements of high-quality literacy assessment. These educators show us how putting those standards in action creates the conditions under which readers thrive.

Beyond Standardized Truth Improving Teaching and Learning through InquiryBased Reading Assessment Scott Filkins The Common Core State Standards call for students to read and comprehend increasingly complex texts as they move through middle and high school. But how to support students as they develop the necessary skills, habits, and stances to grow as readers? Scott Filkins addresses these issues as he unpacks his own history with assessment. Filkins showcases his colleagues’ use of an inquiry framework, including the various tools and documentation methods that help them inquire into their students’ habits and thoughts as readers, use formative assessment to fuel the gradual release of responsibility framework, and use reading assessment as a means of professional reflection. Finally, he challenges us to broaden the conversation about assessment to a wider range of stakeholders and offers a vision of assessment as an expression of care for the students in our charge. 133 pp. | 2012 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814102916 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

173 pp. | 2013 | Grades PreK–5 | ISBN 9780814130773 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814130766

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Writing in Today's Classrooms Writing Instruction in the Culturally Relevant Classroom Maisha T. Winn and Latrise P. Johnson Winn and Johnson support an approach to writing instruction that can help all students succeed, and especially those who have been underserved in US classrooms. Through portraits of four high school teachers, they show how to create an environment for effective learning and teaching in diverse classrooms, answering questions such as: ● How can I honor students’ backgrounds and experiences

to help them become better writers? ● How can I teach in a culturally responsive way if I don’t

share cultural identities with my students? ● How can I move beyond a “heroes and holidays”

approach to culturally relevant pedagogy? ● How can I draw on what I already know about good

writing instruction to make my classes more culturally relevant? 101 pp. | 2011 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814158562 $19.96 member/$24.99 nonmember

Writing in the Dialogical Classroom Students and Teachers Responding to the Texts of Their Lives Bob Fecho Dialogical writing (1) combines academic and personal writing; (2) allows writers to bring multiple voices to the work; (3) involves thought, reflection, and engagement across time and space; and (4) creates opportunities for substantive and ongoing meaning making as students explore who they are and how they relate to the larger culture. Drawing on NCTE Beliefs about the Teaching of Writing, Bob Fecho provides a window into the classrooms of middle and high school teachers who are engaged in a dialogue with their practices. Hear these teachers explain the essentials of their teaching as they demonstrate how dialogical classrooms depend on context and are forever in a state of becoming. This book illustrates the empowerment that can result from dialogical writing as it examines the complexity of implementing this approach in the classroom. 119 pp. | 2011 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814113578 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814158555

Writing Can Change Everything Middle Level Kids Writing Themselves into the World Shelbie Witte, editor Identifying writing as central to what makes us human, editor and teacher educator Shelbie Witte has gathered a diverse group of middle school teacher-writers who open widely the doors of their classrooms to share their approaches to mentoring, modeling, and facilitating middle level writers as they explore their places within our world. Early adolescents might be physically and emotionally in flux, but they are also multidimensional, multitalented creatures of curiosity, always pushing the boundaries of discovery and possibility. The seven educators whose classrooms are showcased in this book know that being a writer is being part of the world, and they lead their students toward the understanding that writing makes a difference, both in their own lives and in the broader world. Writing Can Change Everything invites all of us to consider how the principles outlined in NCTE’s Professional Knowledge for the Teaching of Writing position statement weave throughout the best practices on display as students write through creative self-expression, narrative, inquiry, and project-based learning. 118 pp. | 2020 | Grades 6–8 | ISBN 9780814174876 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814174883

Becoming Writers in the Elementary Classroom Visions and Decisions Katie Van Sluys This book illustrates how teachers of elementary-age writers bring their beliefs about teaching and learning to life—through the visions they hold for writers, writing, and the world, as well as through the decisions they make every day in their classrooms. Katie Van Sluys demonstrates how to (re)claim aspects of our professional practice to ensure that young people have the opportunity to become competent, constantly growing writers who use writing to think, communicate, and pose as well as solve problems. Using NCTE Beliefs about the Teaching of Writing, Van Sluys invites us to articulate our own beliefs as we explore why and what we write, how we write and how we teach, how we assess progress, and how we advocate for the practices we believe in. 145 pp. | 2011 | Grades K–5 | ISBN 9780814102770 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

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Adolescent Literacy

Rethinking the “Adolescent” in Adolescent Literacy Sophia Tatiana Sarigianides, Robert Petrone, and Mark A. Lewis At the heart of this book is a call to English language arts teachers to examine the very assumptions of adolescence they may be operating from in order to reimagine new possibilities for engaging students with the English curriculum. Relying on a sociocultural view of adolescence established by scholars in critical youth studies, the book focuses on classrooms from diverse contexts to explain adolescence as a construct and how this perspective of youth can encourage educators to reenvision literacy instruction and learning. Working from and looking beyond Adolescent Literacy: An NCTE Policy Research Brief, the authors explore the “myth” of adolescence and the possibility of a curriculum that positions youth as experts and knowledgeable advocates fully engaged in their own learning. 105 pp. | 2017 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814141137 $19.96 member/$24.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814141144

Adolescent Literacy and the Teaching of Reading Lessons for Teachers of Literature Deborah Appleman Deborah Appleman dismantles the traditional divide between secondary teachers of literature and teachers of reading and offers a variety of practical ways to teach reading within the context of literature classrooms. Using real-world examples from diverse secondary classrooms, Appleman helps literature teachers find answers to the questions they have about teaching reading: ● How can I help students negotiate the complex texts that

they will encounter both in and out of the classroom? ● What are the best ways to engage whole classes in a

variety of texts, both literary and nonliterary? ● What does it mean to be a struggling reader and how

can I support these students? ● How can I inspire and motivate the male readers in my

classes? 117 pp. | 2010 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814100561 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814100585

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Adolescents and Digital Literacies Learning Alongside Our Students Sara Kajder This book isn’t about technology. It’s about the teaching practices that technology enables, addressing the ways in which teachers and students work together to navigate continuous change and what it means to read, write, view, listen, and communicate in the twenty-first century. Sara Kajder, a nationally recognized expert on technology and literacy, recognizes that students are reading and writing every day in their “real lives.” Drawing on ideas found in Adolescent Literacy: An NCTE Policy Research Brief, Kajder offers solutions for connecting these activities with the literacy practices required by classroom curricula. Through extensive interviews and classroom experiences, Kajder offers examples of both students and teachers who have successfully integrated technology to enrich literacy learning. 119 pp. | 2010 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814152997 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember

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Literacies of the Disciplines

Real-World Literacies Disciplinary Teaching in the High School Classroom Heather Lattimer

“Real-World Literacies is a really amazing resource! Great connections, great resources, and great advice for teachers and schools!” —Jeffrey Austin, Department Chair/Writing Center Director, Skyline High School, Ann Arbor, MI Our highly technological and connected world needs people capable of creative, innovative, and imaginative thinking that crosses disciplines. Why are so many educators pressured to fall back on a standardized, test-driven, single-subject approach to instruction? Heather Lattimer draws on Literacies of Disciplines: An NCTE Policy Research Brief and stories from high school classrooms to illustrate how we can learn to recognize the unique languages and literacy structures represented by various disciplines and then help our students both navigate within individual disciplines and travel among them. Through rich classroom examples, explanations of theory and practice in teacher-friendly language, guiding questions to support discussion and classroom application, and annotated lists of resources, Lattimer reframes the conversation toward true disciplinary literacy. 159 pp. | 2014 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814139431 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814139448

Entering the Conversations Practicing Literacy in the Disciplines Patricia Lambert Stock, Trace Schillinger, and Andrew Stock The authors of Entering the Conversations invite us into their classrooms and professional development workshops to see how students at all levels of instruction can learn both the subject matter and the discipline-specific practices for reading and writing about that subject matter. In this book, we see the engagement and enthusiasm of students caught up in their roles as knowledge makers. As emerging field-based specialists, these students address real-world issues such as the reintroduction of wolves to US ecosystems and how to shape attitudes toward social revolution, demonstrating the value of having students read and write information-rich texts in multiple genres and media. 109 pp. | 2014 | Grades 5–8 | ISBN 9780814115633 $19.96 member/$24.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814115657

Doing and Making Authentic Literacies Linda Denstaedt, Laura Jane Roop, and Stephen Best Too many students don’t see themselves as “doers” and “makers” of authentic work in any of the disciplines of high school, so they make no connection between high school coursework and their future lives and work. But what if we took advantage of our students’ tremendous potential by designing environments in which they can unleash, develop, and publicly share their talents? This book features educators in construction trades, English, math, and multidisciplinary teams who have created empowering disciplinary classrooms and projects that allow students to gain new identities as makers and doers. Building on foundational work in authentic literacies, the authors center their examples in a continuum of disciplinary literacy learning, demonstrating how it can be used to look at and reconfigure lessons, units, courses, and programs. 139 pp. | 2014 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814112199 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814112182

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Reading in Today's Classrooms

Teaching Reading with YA Literature Complex Texts, Complex Lives Jennifer Buehler To meet the needs of all students as readers, we have to offer books they can—and want to—read. Buehler explores the three core elements of a young adult pedagogy with proven success in practice: (1) a classroom that cultivates a reading community; (2) a teacher who serves as book matchmaker and guide; and (3) tasks that foster complexity, agency, and autonomy in teen readers. With a supporting explication of NCTE’s policy research brief Reading Instruction for All Students and lively vignettes of teachers and students reading with passion and purpose, this book is designed to help teachers develop their own version of YA pedagogy and a vision for teaching YA lit in the middle and secondary classroom. 173 pp. | 2016 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814157268 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814157275

Digital Reading What’s Essential in Grades 3–8 William L. Bass II and Franki Sibberson Many of our young students come to school with vast experience in the digital world but too often use digital tools in limited ways because they view technology as merely another form of entertainment. Educators William L. Bass II and Franki Sibberson believe we need to redefine reading to include digital reading and texts, learn how to support digital reading in the classroom, and embed digital tools throughout the elementary and middle school curriculum. Bass, a technology coordinator, and Sibberson, a third-grade teacher, explore the experiences readers must have in order to navigate the digital texts they will encounter, as well as the kinds of lessons we must develop to enhance those experiences. Drawing on the NCTE policy research brief Reading Instruction for All Students, they lead from experience—both theirs and that of other classroom teachers. 122 pp. | 2015 | Grades 3–8 | ISBN 9780814111574 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814111581

Connected Reading Teaching Adolescent Readers in a Digital World Kristen Hawley Turner and Troy Hicks Having ready access to digital tools and texts doesn’t mean that middle and high school students are automatically thoughtful, adept readers. So how can we help adolescents become critical readers in a digital age? Using NCTE’s policy research brief Reading Instruction for All Students as both guide and sounding board, experienced teacher-researchers Kristen Hawley Turner and Troy Hicks report on interviews and survey data from visits with hundreds of teens, which led to the development of their model of Connected Reading: “Digital tools, used mindfully, enable connections. Digital reading is connected reading.” Turner and Hicks offer practical tips by highlighting classroom practices that engage students in reading and thinking with both print and digital texts, thus encouraging reading instruction that reaches all students. 179 pp. | 2015 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814108376 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814108383

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Teaching English Language Learners Writing across Culture and Language Inclusive Strategies for Working with ELL Writers in the ELA Classroom Christina Ortmeier-Hooper Ortmeier-Hooper challenges deficit models of ELL and multilingual writers and offers techniques to help teachers identify their students’ strengths and develop inclusive research-based writing practices that are helpful to all students. Her approach, aligned with specific writing instruction recommendations outlined in the NCTE Position Paper on the Role of English Teachers in Educating English Language Learners (ELLs), connects theory to classroom application, with a focus on writing instruction, response, and assessment for ELL and multilingual students. Through rich examples of these writers and their writing practices, along with “best practices” input from classroom teachers, this book provides accessible explanations of second language writing theory and pedagogy in teacher-friendly language, concrete suggestions for the classroom, guiding questions to support discussion, and an annotated list of resources. 155 pp. | 2017 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814158531 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814158548

Learning from Bilingual After-School Programs Steven Alvarez Most teachers of English language learners are not adequately prepared to meet the challenges of working with this growing demographic of K–12 students. Alvarez argues that teachers’ greatest resources are the students themselves, with both a facility in their home language and ties to their home communities. He highlights the importance of building mutual trust, or confianza, between students, schools, and communities, both inside and outside of the classroom. After-school programs focused on English learners offer a way for parents, teachers, and volunteers to collectively navigate school systems and the English language, share stories, and develop facility in reading and writing across languages. Alvarez offers ideas for approaching, engaging, and partnering with students’ communities to design culturally sustaining pedagogies that productively use the literacy abilities students bring to schools. 107 pp. | 2017 | Grades PreK–12 | ISBN 9780814107867 $19.96 member/$24.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814107874

Beyond “Teaching to the Test” Rethinking Accountability and Assessment for English Language Learners Betsy Gilliland and Shannon Pella Speaking directly to teachers who work closely with English language learners, Gilliland and Pella examine essential questions in this age of accountability: What kind of accountability measures truly demonstrate multilingual students’ learning? How do these measures reflect the planning and teaching that teachers do to help their students grow? The authors take readers into the classrooms of middle and high school teachers to illustrate accountability practices that exemplify the principles outlined in the NCTE Position Paper on the Role of English Teachers in Educating English Language Learners (ELLs). The authors explain teaching for accountability, formative and summative assessment, and preparation for high-stakes testing, as well as provide suggestions for teaching, guiding questions for discussion, and resource recommendations. 167 pp. | 2017 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814102947 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814102954

Community Literacies en Confianza

Understanding Language Supporting ELL Students in Responsive ELA Classrooms Melinda J. McBee Orzulak Engaging with critical questions such as “What counts as language?” and “How can I know when a student is struggling with language?,” Melinda J. McBee Orzulak explores how mainstream ELA teachers might begin to understand language in new ways to benefit both English language learner and non-ELL students learning in the same classroom. Offering supportive teaching resources and ways to notice and understand the strengths of ELL students, she outlines strategies for respectful and rigorous instruction for all students as we consider our own cultural and linguistic expectations. She also addresses responses to common curricular challenges such as (1) structuring positive environments for students as both learners and adolescents; (2) providing a language focus in our teaching; and (3) assessing the range of literacies our ELL students possess. 159 pp. | 2017 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814155646 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814155653

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Grammar What Works in Grammar Instruction

NEW

Deborah Dean As most teachers of English now know, research shows that teaching grammar in the traditional way—through worksheets, memorizing definitions, and diagramming sentences—doesn’t work, and that teaching grammar in the context of reading and writing is a better approach. In this friendly and practical book, veteran teacher educator Deborah Dean ● provides vignettes of classroom conversations to show what

teaching in context can look like in action; ● supplements the vignettes with descriptions of classroom practices

to help teachers try out the ideas with their own students; and ● addresses issues such as helping English language learners and

native speakers navigate formal, academic English, especially in the context of testing. Dean’s straightforward approach uncomplicates the task of teaching grammar in context, allowing her—and us—to share the excitement and wonder to be found in the study of language. 177 pp. | 2022 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814156834 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814156841

Engaging Grammar Practical Advice for Real Classrooms Second Edition Amy Benjamin Does grammar instruction have to elicit moans and groans from students and teachers alike? Only when it’s taught the old-fashioned way: as a series of rules to follow and errors to “fix” that have little or no connection to practical application or real-world writing. Teacher, researcher, and consultant Amy Benjamin challenges the idea of “skill and drill” grammar in the second edition of this lively, engaging, and immensely practical guide. Her enlightened view of grammar is grounded in linguistics and teaches us how to make informed decisions about teaching grammar—how to move beyond fixing surface errors to teaching how grammar can be used as the building blocks of sentences to create meaning. By using sentence patterns, mapping, visuals, and manipulatives, Benjamin presents an approach to grammar instruction that is suitable for a variety of student populations. Although she doesn’t advocate for teaching to the test, Benjamin acknowledges the pressures students face when taking high-stakes tests such as the SAT and ACT. Included is a chapter on how to improve students’ editing skills to help prepare them for the short-answer portion of these tests. 151 pp. | 2021 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814113660 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814113677

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Grammar to Get Things Done A Practical Guide for Teachers Anchored in Real-World Usage Darren Crovitz and Michelle D. Devereaux Grammar to Get Things Done offers a fresh lens on grammar and grammar instruction, designed for middle and secondary preservice and inservice English teachers. It shows how form, function, and use can help teachers move away from decontextualized grammar instruction (such as worksheets and exercises emphasizing rule-following and memorizing conventional definitions) and begin considering grammar in applied contexts of everyday use. Modules (organized by units) succinctly explain common grammatical concepts. These modules help English teachers gain confidence in their own understanding while positioning grammar instruction as an opportunity to discuss, analyze, and produce language for real purposes in the world. An important feature of the text is attention to both the history of and current attitudes about grammar through a sociocultural lens, with ideas for teachers to bring discussions of language-as-power into their own classrooms. Routledge and NCTE 232 pp. | 2016 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9781138683709 $27.95 member/$34.95 nonmember

More Grammar to Get Things Done Daily Lessons for Teaching Grammar in Context Darren Crovitz and Michelle D. Devereaux Complementing Crovitz and Devereaux’s successful Grammar to Get Things Done, this book demystifies grammar in context and offers day-by-day guides for teaching ten grammar concepts, giving teachers a model and vocabulary for discussing grammar in real ways with their students. Through applied practice in real-world contexts, the authors explain how to develop students’ mastery of grammar and answer difficult questions about usage, demonstrating how grammar acts as a tool for specific purposes in students’ lives. Accessibly written and organized, the book provides ten adaptable activity guides for each concept, illustrating instruction from a use-based perspective. Middle and high school preservice and inservice English teachers will gain confidence in their own grammar knowledge and learn how to teach grammar in ways that are uniquely accessible and purposeful for students. Routledge and NCTE 168 pp. | 2019 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9780367194819 $29.95 member/$36.95 nonmember

Grammar Alive! A Guide for Teachers Brock Haussamen, with Amy Benjamin, Martha Kolln, Rebecca S. Wheeler, and members of NCTE’s Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar NCTE’s Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar provides this much-needed resource for K–college teachers who wonder what to do about grammar—how to teach it, how to apply it, how to learn what they themselves were never taught. Grammar Alive! offers teachers ways to negotiate the often conflicting goals of testing, confident writing, the culturally inclusive classroom, and the teaching of Standard English while also honoring other varieties of English. 121 pp. | 2003 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814118726 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember

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Quick-Reference Guides

NCTE’s Quick-Reference Guides! Written and curated by some of the leading authors and voices in literacy education, these engaging and easy-access tri-fold guides offer brief, research-based definitions, strategies, tips, activities, and more to address many of the core topics in English and language arts classrooms. With professional learning time harder and harder to come by, the guides offer great prompts for individual instruction as well as jumping-off points for deeper group discussions. Exceptional for both K–12 teachers and college students, the guides are both laminated for protection from stain and wear, and three-hole-punched for easy binder storage and access.

All individual QRGs are $10.39 member/$12.99 nonmember. 25-packs: $233.78 member/$292.28 nonmember Buy in 25-Packs and Save an Additional 10%! You can purchase NCTE quick-reference guides individually or save an additional 10% by purchasing 25-packs for workshops and professional learning groups.

To learn more about the NCTE Quick-Reference Guides, visit https://ncte.org/resources/quick-reference-guides/

NEW

NEW

Antibias and Antiracist Teaching: The Time Is Always Now

Engaging Students with Library of Congress Primary Sources in the ELA Classroom

Damián Baca, Kathleen Colantonio-Yurko, Lorena Germán, Richard Gorham, Patrick Harris, Keisha Rembert, and Holly Spinelli

Rebecca Newland

ISBN 9780814186404

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Note: This QRG is available as a free digital download on NCTE's ReadWriteThink website and is not available in print. Scan the QR code to access it now!

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QRGs | Reading

Conferring with Readers

Teaching Reading Art Lessons

Kari Yates and Christina Nosek

Jan Burkins and Kim Yaris ISBN 9780814186237

ISBN 9780814186251

Teaching Poetry Experiences for Readers and Writers in the K–2 Classroom

Teaching Reading with YA Literature

Maria Walther

ISBN 9780814186008

Jennifer Buehler

ISBN 9780814186734

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Quick-Reference Guides

QRGs | Writing

Teaching Grammar in the Secondary Classroom

Teaching Voice in Secondary Writing

Deborah Dean

Susanne Rubenstein

ISBN 9780814186275

ISBN 9780814186015

Teaching Guided Writing: Scaffolding for Success

Teaching Secondary Writing

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Lori Oczkus

Deborah Dean

ISBN 9780814186282

ISBN 9780814186039

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QRGs | Curriculum

Teaching Children’s Literature: Critical Inquiry to Foster Equity

Building ELA Classroom Culture through Gaming

Detra Price-Dennis

ISBN 9780814186305

Chris Proctor and Antero Garcia

ISBN 9780814186299

Unit Design in the ELA Classroom Peter Smagorinsky ISBN 9780814186022

Literacy Instruction for Students Living with Trauma Nancy Akhavan ISBN 9780814186091

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Quick-Reference Guides

QRGs | Next Generation

Next Generation literacy, from Burkins and Yaris, helps educators improve upon familiar literacy practices such as read aloud, shared reading, guided reading, and independent reading through the use of scaffolding and the gradual release of responsibility.

Next Generation Read Aloud in the Elementary Classroom

Next Generation Guided Reading in the Elementary Classroom

Jan Burkins and Kim Yaris

Jan Burkins and Kim Yaris

ISBN 9780814186114

ISBN 9780814186176

Next Generation Independent Reading in the Elementary Classroom Jan Burkins and Kim Yaris ISBN 9780814186152

Next Generation Shared Reading in the Elementary Classroom

Next Generation Scaffolding and GRR

Jan Burkins and Kim Yaris

Jan Burkins and Kim Yaris

ISBN 9780814186138

ISBN 9780814186206

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Writing What Works in Writing Instruction Research and Practice, Second Edition Deborah Dean “What works?” As teachers, it’s a question we often ask ourselves about teaching writing, and it often summarizes other, more specific questions we have: ● What contributes to an effective climate for writing? ● What practices and structures best support effective writing instruction? ● What classroom content helps writers develop? ● What tasks are most beneficial for writers learning to write? ● What choices should I make as a teacher to best help my students?

Using teacher-friendly language and classroom examples, Deborah Dean helps answer these questions; she looks closely at instructional practices supported by a broad range of research and weaves them together into accessible recommendations that can inspire teachers to find what works for their own classrooms and students. Initially based on the Carnegie Institute’s influential Writing Next report, this second edition of What Works in Writing Instruction looks at more types of research that have been conducted in the decade since the publication of that first research report. The new research rounds out its list of recommended practices and is designed to help teachers apply the findings to their unique classroom environments. We all must find the right mix of practices and tasks for our own students, and this book offers the best of what is currently known about effective writing instruction to help teachers help students develop as writers. 170 pp. | 2021 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814156810 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814156827

Genre Theory

Strategic Writing

Teaching, Writing, and Being

The Writing Process and Beyond in the Secondary English Classroom, Second Edition

Deborah Dean Contemporary genre theory is probably not what you learned in college. Its dynamic focus on writing as a social activity in response to a particular situation makes it a powerful tool for teaching practical skills and preparing students to write beyond the classroom. Although genre is often viewed as simply a method for labeling different types of writing, Deborah Dean argues that exploring genre theory can help teachers energize their classroom practices. Genre Theory synthesizes theory and research about genres and provides applications that help teachers artfully address the challenges of teaching high school writing. Theory and Research Into Practice (TRIP) series 119 pp. | 2008 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814118412 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember

Deborah Dean Dean worked with high school teachers to refine, reorganize, and update the material in this book to better support classroom teachers dedicated to teaching not just the process of writing but also the strategies that help students learn to write effectively throughout their lives. Along with engaging and practical mini-lesson classroom activities, this new edition offers (1) lesson plans that differentiate between strategy, activity, and mini-lesson to show how all three function in a strategic approach; (2) a focus on digital tools and genres; (3) conceptual material in early, short chapters and the teaching ideas, examples of student work, and lesson plans in appendixes; and (4) grouping by types of strategies. Dean also considers students’ out-of-school as well as inschool writing tasks. 208 pp. | 2017 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814147559 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814147573

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Writing

Elementary

The Reader Response Notebook Teaching toward Agency, Autonomy, and Accountability Ted Kesler The reader response notebook (RRN) is a tried-and-true tool in elementary and middle school classrooms. However, teachers and students often express frustration about this tool. Students’ responses sometimes feel like they’re just going through the motions, with little evidence of deep comprehension. This book breathes new life into RRNs by infusing this work with three key practices: (1) enabling responses to be design work, using a variety of writing tools; (2) expanding what counts as texts, including popular culture texts that are important in students’ lives outside of school; and (3) making the RRN an integral part of a community of practice. Kesler shows how we can teach students toward agency, autonomy, and accountability in their RRN work. Filled with examples of student work and explicit teaching in classrooms, the book shows how students’ creative responses lead to deep comprehension of diverse texts and ultimately develop their literate identities. 155 pp. | 2018 | Grades K–8 | ISBN 9780814138403 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814138410

The Writing Workshop Working through the Hard Parts (And They’re All Hard Parts) Katie Wood Ray, with Lester L. Laminack Katie Wood Ray offers a practical, comprehensive, and illuminating guide to support both new and experienced teachers. While every aspect of writing workshop is geared to support children learning to write, this kind of teaching is often challenging because what writers really do is engage in a complex, multilayered, slippery process to produce texts. The book confronts the challenge of this teaching head-on. Woven between the chapters on teaching are the voices of published writers, followed by short commentaries from Lester L. Laminack. These voices remind us how writers do what they do, thus lending authenticity to what Katie Wood Ray shows us in the classroom and thoughtfully helping us frame our instruction to match the complex process of writing.

Wondrous Words Writers and Writing in the Elementary Classroom Katie Wood Ray Wondrous Words is a “loud” book, filled with the voices of writers, young and old. Drawing on stories from classrooms, examples of student writing, and illustrations, Katie Wood Ray explains in practical terms the theoretical underpinnings of how elementary and middle school students learn to write from their reading. The author invites readers into her library and offers suggestions on using books by authors including Cynthia Rylant, Debra Frasier, Eve Bunting, and Gary Paulsen to help teach writing. Wondrous Words weaves practice and theory together to provide an important knowledge base for teachers. 317 pp. | 1999 | Grades K–6 | ISBN 9780814158166 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

278 pp. | 2001 | Grades 3–8 | ISBN 9780814113172 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

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Secondary A Place to Write

Speak for Yourself

Getting Your Students out of the Classroom and into the World

Writing with Voice

Rob Montgomery and Amanda Montgomery A Place to Write is both a rationale for moving students out of the classroom to write in realworld spaces and a howto guide to help teachers develop their own placebased writing activities. Each chapter explores opportunities for writing in a different real-world setting such as museums, public places, and natural places by providing a range of practical classroom activities in a variety of commonly taught genres. Each activity is accompanied by considerations for teachers who may want to forge interdisciplinary connections and/or add authentic audiences to their students’ work. Rob and Amanda Montgomery also suggest adaptations and scaffolding for students with special needs and English language learners. A Place to Write provides a comprehensive view of how placebased writing can be incorporated for a range of classroom purposes. While this includes environmental advocacy, the book also encompasses issues of equity and social justice, school safety, and culture and identity, as well as including accessible ideas for teaching common genres such as personal narrative, argumentation, and authentic forms of inquiry. 240 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9780814135457 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814135464

“A gem! The memoir writing chapter has fantastic low-stakes prompts and mentor text ideas. The whole book is an artful and compelling case for teaching voice.” —Elizabeth Rich Woo

As writing instruction becomes more standardized and structured, student voices grow silent. Speak for Yourself: Writing with Voice places a new emphasis on voice in the teaching of writing. Armed with the philosophy and concrete teaching ideas offered in this book, teachers can find the courage to speak up in order to create writing classrooms where students take ownership of their work, enjoy what they’re writing, and produce writing that shows depth of thought and originality of expression. This book acknowledges the pressures English teachers face in today’s educational climate, but challenges teachers to rally their expertise and enthusiasm so that student writers develop voice and speak for themselves. 143 pp. | 2018 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814146149 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814146156

Writing about Literature, 2nd ed. Revised and Updated

Learning to Write for Readers Using Brain-Based Strategies John T. Crow Crow first uses nontechnical language and fun classroom demonstrations to explore how proficient readers process written material. He then applies this perspective to specific areas of writing instruction, including analyzing texts and audiences; experimenting with sentences, paragraphs, and essay writing; and helping Standardized English learners acquire academic English. This brain-based approach to writing instruction will help you build from the tremendous storehouse of knowledge students already possess about language to help them learn what they need to know about writing. 157 pp. | 2011 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814127827 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Susanne Rubenstein

Larry R. Johannessen, Elizabeth A. Kahn, and Carolyn Calhoun Walter Drawing on years of real classroom experience, the authors address the challenge many teachers face: how can we use writing assignments to deepen students’ understanding of literature, while at the same time improve their writing, critical thinking, and analytical skills? This book provides an overview of the key components of theory and research—including assessment, literary interpretation, composition, sequencing, and activity design—and then offers practical activities to help students learn how to interpret literature, write compelling arguments, and support those arguments using evidence from the text. Theory and Research Into Practice (TRIP) series 104 pp. | 2009 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814132111 $19.96 member/$24.99 nonmember

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Writing

Secondary /College Designing Writing Assignments

Lesson Plans for Teaching Writing

Traci Gardner

Chris Jennings Dixon, editor

Effective student writing begins with well-designed classroom assignments. In this book, veteran educator Traci Gardner offers practical ways to develop assignments that will allow students to express their creativity and grow as writers and thinkers while still addressing the many demands of resourcestretched classrooms. Gardner uses her classroom experience to provide ideas on how to effectively define a writing task, explore the expectations for a composition activity, and assemble the supporting materials that students need to do their best work. She includes dozens of starting points that you can customize and further develop for your own students.

This collection of lesson plans, grouped around popular categories such as writing process, portfolios, and writing on demand, will help prepare high school and college students for college-level writing. Each lesson follows a standard format that includes purpose of the activity; necessary preparation; required props and materials; process and procedure for implementation; instructional pointers and/or possible pitfalls; and reflections from the teacher that provide “behind the scenes” insights. 249 pp. | 2007 | Grades 8–College | ISBN 9780814108857 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

109 pp. | 2008 | Grades 9–College | ISBN 9780814110850 $19.96 member/$24.99 nonmember

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College/Digital Literacy Teaching Writing Online How and Why Scott Warnock

“Using this book is a way for those who have never been ‘inside’ an OW course to experience what that’s like.” —Lisa Dush, associate professor of writing, rhetoric, and discourse, DePaul University, Chicago, IL

How can you migrate your tried and true face-to-face teaching practices into an online environment? Warnock explores how to teach an online (or hybrid) writing course by emphasizing the importance of using and managing students’ written communications. Grounded in Warnock’s years of experience in teaching, teacher preparation, online learning, and composition scholarship, this book is designed with usability in mind. Features include: ● How to manage online conversations ● Responding to students ● Organizing course material ● Core guidelines for teaching online ● Resource chapter and appendix with sample teaching

Writing Together Ten Weeks Teaching and Studenting in an Online Writing Course Scott Warnock and Diana Gasiewski As more and more college writing instructors are asked to teach online courses, the need for practical, day-to-day advice about what to expect in these courses and how to conduct them has grown. This book narrates the experience of an asynchronous online writing course (OWC) through the dual perspective of the teacher, Scott, and a student, Diana Gasiewski. They each describe their strategies, activities, approaches, thoughts, and responses as they move week by week through the experience of teaching and taking an OWC. This narrative approach includes details about specific assignments and teaching strategies, and through the experience of the student author, OWC instructors will better understand how students perceive OWCs and navigate through them—and how students manage their lives in the context of distance education. 267 pp. | 2018 | College | ISBN 9780814159231 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814159248

materials 235 pp. | 2009 | College | ISBN 9780814152539 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

Making Hybrids Work

Mobile Technologies and the Writing Classroom Resources for Teachers Claire Lutkewitte, editor If compositionists wish to be pedagogically relevant, they need to think carefully about how their students read and compose texts and where they do so. More and more young people are choosing to write a variety of texts in a variety of locations because technologies make it possible. This book provides practical resources and assignments for writing instructors who are interested in a pedagogy that makes use of mobile technologies. The contributors explore both writing for and about mobile technologies and writing with mobile technologies. The book offers (1) a starting point for instructors who haven’t yet used mobile technologies in the classroom, (2) fresh ideas to those who have and proof that they are not alone, and (3) a call of reassurance that we can do more with less. 234 pp. | 2016 | College | ISBN 9780814131961 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814131978

An Institutional Framework for Blending Online and Face-to-Face Instruction in Higher Education Joanna N. Paull and Jason Allen Snart Making Hybrids Work provides a resource for institutions of higher education to grow and sustain quality hybrid courses—those combining online and face-to-face learning— by outlining an institutional framework that focuses on defining and advertising hybrids; developing, supporting, and assessing hybrid programs; and training faculty. To examine the reality rather than the hype of a hybrid curriculum, the authors consider several existing hybrid courses in a variety of disciplines, as well as explore the possibilities and limitations of teaching with technology. Although there is no one easy path to instituting a hybrid curriculum, the authors argue that the hybrid model might well offer a potential “best of both worlds” in its blending of online and face-to-face instruction, but only with a strong foundation of institutional planning and professional support in place. 227 pp. | 2016 | College | ISBN 9780814130537 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814130544

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Writing

College Sustainable WAC

The Lifespan Development of Writing Charles Bazerman, Arthur N. Applebee, Virginia W. Berninger, Deborah Brandt, Steve Graham, Jill V. Jeffery, Paul Kei Matsuda, Sandra Murphy, Deborah Wells Rowe, Mary Schleppegrell, and Kristen Campbell Wilcox How does writing develop before, during, and after schooling, and how do an individual’s writing experiences relate to one another developmentally across the lifespan? This book is a first step toward understanding how people develop as writers over their lifetimes. The authors present the results of a four-year project to synthesize the research on writing development at different ages from multiple, cross-disciplinary perspectives, including psychological, linguistic, sociocultural, and curricular. First collectively offering the joint statement “Toward an Understanding of Writing Development across the Lifespan,” the authors then focus individually on specific periods of writing development, including early childhood, adolescence, and working adulthood. They conclude with a summative understanding of trajectories of writing development and implications for further research, teaching, and policy. 398 pp. | 2018 | preK–College | ISBN 9780814128169 $31.96 member/$39.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814128176

A Whole Systems Approach to Launching and Developing Writing Across the Curriculum Programs Michelle Cox, Jeffrey R. Galin, and Dan Melzer A 2008 survey of Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) programs found that nearly half of those identified in a 1987 survey no longer existed twenty years later, pointing to a need for an approach to WAC administration that leads to programs that persist over time. In Sustainable WAC, three current or former WAC program directors introduce a theoretical framework for WAC program development that takes into account the diverse contexts of today’s institutions of higher education, aids WAC program directors in thinking strategically as they develop programs, and integrates a focus on program sustainability. Informed by theories that illuminate transformative change within systems and illustrated with vignettes by WAC directors across the country, this book lays out principles, strategies, and tactics to help WAC program directors launch, relaunch, or reinvigorate programs within the complicated systems of today’s colleges and universities. 272 pp. | 2018 | College | ISBN 9780814149522 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814149546

What Is “College-Level” Writing? Volume 2 Assignments, Readings, and Student Writing Samples Patrick Sullivan, Howard Tinberg, and Sheridan Blau, editors This sequel to What Is “College-Level” Writing? (2006) highlights the practical and the pragmatic aspects of teaching writing. The essays in this collection focus on things all English and writing teachers concern themselves with on a daily basis—assignments, readings, and real student writing. Contributors include students, high school teachers, and college instructors in conversation with one another. Through a pragmatic lens, the volume addresses other important issues related to college-level writing, including assignment design, the use of the five-paragraph essay, and the AP test, as well as issues related to L2/ELL and Generation 1.5 students. 329 pp. | 2010 | Grades 9–College | ISBN 9780814156766 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

What Is “College-Level” Writing?

Patrick Sullivan and Howard Tinberg, editors 418 pp. | 2006 | Grades 9–College | ISBN 9780814156742 No. 56742 | $31.96 member/$39.99 nonmember

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Composition

Immigrant Scholars in Rhetoric, Composition, and Communication

Cross-Talk in Comp Theory A Reader, Third Edition

Memoirs of a First Generation

Victor Villanueva and Kristin L. Arola, editors

Letizia Guglielmo and Sergio C. Figueiredo, editors

For the third edition of Cross-Talk in Comp Theory, Victor Villanueva recruited the expertise of colleague Kristin L. Arola in order to flesh out the discussion on composition and technology. The quick movement of the paradigm—from the personal computer to local-area networks to the rise of social networking—suggests the need to recall the talk and the crosstalk concerning computers and their products for composition.

This collection of essays shares the experiences of firstgeneration immigrant scholars in rhetoric, composition, and communication and how those experiences shape individual academic identity and, in turn, the teaching of writing and rhetoric. In addition to exploring how literacy is always complex, situational, and influenced by multiple and diverse identities, individual essays narrate the ways in which teacher-scholars negotiate multiple identities and liminal spaces, while often navigating insider/outsider status as students, teachers, and professionals. Extending current and ongoing conversations within the field, contributors consider how these experiences shape their individual literacies and understanding of literacy; how their literacy experiences lie at the intersections of gender, race, class, and public policy; and how these experiences often provide the motivation to pursue an academic career in rhetoric, composition, and communication. 195 pp. | 2019 | College | ISBN 9780814117392 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814117408

The award-winning Villanueva and his coeditor Arola have dropped nine essays from the second edition, reoriented others into new sections, and added eight new essays, including six in the new technology section, “Virtual Talk: Composing beyond the Word.” Amid these changes, the third edition maintains the historical perspective of previous editions while continuing to provide insights on the relatively new discipline of composition studies. Landmark contributions by major figures such as Donald Murray, Janet Emig, Walter Ong, Sondra Perl, Mike Rose, and Patricia Bizzell remain. They are joined by the works of other trailblazing scholars such as Peter Elbow and Richard Ohmann. This edition also incorporates texts by key names within comp’s conversations on technology, including Adam Banks, Cynthia Selfe, and Kathleen Blake Yancey. The result is a collection that continues to provide new and experienced teachers and scholars with indispensable insights into the challenges, controversies, and ever-shifting currents within our rich and ever-evolving field. 899 pp. | 2011 | College | ISBN 9780814109779 $39.96 member/$49.99 nonmember

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Composition Just Theory An Alternative History of the Western Tradition David B. Downing Just Theory offers an alternative history of critical theory in the context of the birth and transformation of the Western philosophical tradition. But rather than providing a summary survey, it situates the production of theoretical texts within the geopolitical economy of just two pivotal cultural turns: Cultural Turn 1 (roughly 450–350 BCE) looks at the Platonic revolution, during which a new philosophic, universalist, and literate discourse emerged from what had long been an oral culture; Cultural Turn 2 (roughly 1770–1870) investigates the Romantic revolution and its nineteenth-century aftermath up to the Paris Commune. While focusing on the quest for social justice, David B. Downing situates the two cultural turns within deep time: Cultural Turn 1 gave birth to the Western philosophical tradition during the Holocene; Cultural Turn 2 witnessed the beginnings of the shift to the Anthropocene when the Industrial Revolution and the fossil fuel age began to alter our complex biospheres and geospheres. As described in the epilogue, the aftereffects of Western metaphysics have dramatically shaped our twenty-first-century world, especially for teachers and scholars in English and the humanities. 459 pp. | 2019 | College | ISBN 9780814125304 $39.96 member/$49.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814125328

Bootstraps

Strategies for Teaching First-Year Composition

From an American Academic of Color Victor Villanueva, Jr. Bootstraps is an unusual book: at one level it is autobiographical, detailing the life of an American of Puerto Rican extraction from his childhood in New York City to an academic post at a university. At another level, Villanueva ponders his experiences in light of the history of rhetoric, the English Only movement, current socioand psycholinguistic theory, and the writings of Gramsci and Freire, among others. David H. Russell Award for Distinguished Research in the Teaching of English 151 pp. | 1993 | College | ISBN 9780814103777 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Duane Roen, Veronica Pantoja, Lauren Yena, Susan K. Miller, and Eric Waggoner, editors This book offers guidance, reassurance, and thoughtful commentary on the many activities leading up to and surrounding teaching firstyear composition: ● What preparation do I need to teach first-year comp? ● How do I construct a syllabus? ● How do I develop effective writing assignments? ● Why am I teaching writing at all? ● And what’s the place of writing in a university

education? 626 pp. | 2002 | College | ISBN 9780814147498 $39.96 member/$49.99 nonmember

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Literature & Reading Workshopping the Canon

Engaging American Novels

Mary E. Styslinger

Lessons from the Classroom

“Workshopping the Canon has made me have so many ‘Aha Moments.’ If you are an ELAR teacher, you should read this!” —Shawna Easton, 8th-Grade ELAR teacher, Rogers Middle School, Prosper, TX

Styslinger demonstrates how to partner classic texts with a variety of high-interest genres within a reading and writing workshop structure, aligning the teaching of literature with what we have come to recognize as best practices in the teaching of literacy. Guided by a multitude of teacher voices, student examples, and useful ideas, workshopping teachers explore a unit focus and its essential questions through a variety of reading workshop structures, including read-alouds, independent reading, shared reading, close reading, response engagements, Socratic circles, book clubs, and mini-lessons (e.g., how-to, reading, literary, craft, vocabulary, and critical), as well as writing workshop structures comprising mentor texts, writing plans, minilessons, independent writing, conferences, writing circles, and publishing. 197 pp. | 2017 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814158470 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814158494

Joseph O. Milner and Carol A. Pope, editors Urging students to read novels can be a truly demanding task. But the ability to help students find novels engaging is a mark of an exceptional teacher. This collection focuses on ten frequently taught American novels, both classic and contemporary, that can help promote such engagement: ● Of Mice and Men

● The Bluest Eye

● Out of the Dust

● The Outsiders

● The Great Gatsby

● The Chocolate War

● Bless Me, Ultima ● Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ● Their Eyes Were Watching God ● To Kill a Mockingbird 390 pp. | 2011 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814113585 $31.96 member/$39.99 nonmember

Building Literacy Connections with Graphic Novels

Stories Matter The Complexity of Cultural Authenticity in Children’s Literature Dana L. Fox and Kathy G. Short, editors This collection highlights important historical events, current debates, and new questions and critiques in the controversial issue of cultural authenticity in children’s literature. Contributors include Rudine Sims Bishop, Jacqueline © Susan Guevara 2000 Woodson, Susan Guevara, Kathryn Lasky, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Joel Taxel, and Mingshui Cai. Essays address the social responsibility of authors, the role of imagination and experience in writing for young people, cultural sensitivity and values, authenticity of content and images, authorial freedom, and the role of literature in an education that is multicultural.

Page by Page, Panel by Panel James Bucky Carter, editor James Bucky Carter and the contributors to this collection have found an effective approach for engaging student learners: use graphic novels! They tap into the growing popularity of graphic novels in this one-of-a-kind guidebook. Each chapter presents practical suggestions for the classroom as it pairs a graphic novel with a more traditional text or examines connections between multiple sources. Packed with great ideas for integrating graphic novels into the curriculum, this collection of creative and effective teaching strategies will help you and your students join the fun. Winner of the inaugural Excellence in Graphica in Education Award 164 pp. | 2007 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814103920 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

340 pp. | 2003 | Grades K–8 | ISBN 9780814147443 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

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Literature & Reading

Secondary Theater, Drama, and NEW Reading Transforming the Rehearsal Process into a Reading Process Judith Freeman Garey Foreword by Sheridan Blau

Drawing on both the production aspects of theater and the generative learning elements of drama, Garey shows readers how to transform text from print to interaction, establishing a simple framework for how to read as an actor who builds characters’ lives, a set designer who constructs context, and a director who generates action. This significant and practical new resource for all language arts teachers provides step-by-step examples from classroom practice, and clearly demonstrates how the strategies achieve the Common Core State Standards. 197 pp. | 2021 | Grades 7–College | ISBN 9780814153635 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814153659

Reading Challenging Texts Layering Literacies through the Arts James S. Chisholm and Kathryn F. Whitmore Bringing together artsintegrated approaches, literacy learning, and classroom-based research, this book explores ways upper elementary, middle, and high school teachers can engage their students physically, cognitively, and emotionally in deep reading of challenging texts. With a focus on teaching about the Holocaust and Anne Frank’s diary—part of the US middle school literary canon— the authors present the concept of layering literacies as an essential means for conceptualizing how seeing the text, being the text, and feeling the text invite adolescents to learn about difficult and uncomfortable literature and subjects in relation to their contemporary lives. Accessible strategies are illustrated and resources are recommended for teachers to draw on as they design artsbased instruction for their students’ learning with challenging texts. Routledge and NCTE 137 pp. | 2018 | Grades 5–12 | ISBN 9781138058644 $35.95 member/$44.95 nonmember

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Rethinking Reading in College An Across-the-Curriculum Approach Arlene Fish Wilner Synthesizing theory from literacy scholars with strategies derived from classroom inquiry projects, Wilner argues for more—and more systematic—attention to the role of reading comprehension in college as a necessary step in addressing the inequities in student achievement. Through a critique of the philosophy behind the Common Core State Standards, Wilner examines the needs of college-bound high school students and interrogates the nature of “remediation” in college, arguing that when supported by rhetorical-reading assignments, students in all first-year writing classes can and should explore complex and enduring texts. Addressing both composition and reading across the curriculum, Wilner demonstrates how faculty in all disciplines and at all curricular levels can improve student outcomes by first deliberately inhabiting the persona of novices, rethinking their assumptions about what students know and can do. 237 pp. | 2020 | Grades 11–College | ISBN 9780814141229 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814141236

Deep Reading Teaching Reading in the Writing Classroom Patrick Sullivan, Howard Tinberg, and Sheridan Blau, editors Contributors to this collection— high school teachers, college students who discuss the challenges they faced as readers and writers, and composition scholars—define the challenges to integrating reading into the writing classroom, develop a theory of reading as a specific type of inquiry and meaningmaking activity, and offer practical approaches to teaching deep reading in writing courses that can be put immediately to use in the classroom. The volume concludes with letters written directly to students about the importance of reading, not only in the classroom but also as a richly complex social, cognitive, and affective human activity. 2019 Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) Outstanding Book Award in the Edited Collection category 386 pp. | 2017 | Grades 9–College | ISBN 9780814110638 $31.96 member/$39.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814110645

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Reading for Learning Using DisciplineBased Texts to Build Content Knowledge Heather Lattimer This book addresses headon the reality that teaching reading and teaching content can, and should, go hand in hand to support subject area learning. Drawing on research in human cognition, reading development, and discipline-specific pedagogies, Heather Lattimer provides practical, classroom-tested approaches to helping students access and critically respond to content-based texts, such as selecting texts that enhance student learning, using strategies to help focus student readers before they engage with texts, and supporting comprehension in content areas through discussion and writing. 159 pp. | 2010 | Grades 5–10 | ISBN 9780814108437 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Literacy Engagement through Peritextual Analysis Shelbie Witte, Don Latham, and Melissa Gross, editors Peritextual analysis teaches readers how to evaluate information and sources using elements that precede or follow the body of the text, including a work’s preface, afterword, index, dust jacket, promotional blurbs, and bibliography. This important book outlines the Peritextual Literacy Framework that defines and explains components such as production elements, promotional elements, navigational elements, intratextual elements, supplemental elements, and documentary elements, offering examples drawn from both print and nonprint texts. It presents several case studies showing peritextual analysis in action and examines how the functions of peritext and the Peritextual Literacy Framework exist within online news articles, film and media packaging, and other nonprint texts. American Library Association and NCTE 176 pp. | 2018 | Grades K–16 | ISBN 9780838917688 $35.99 member/$44.99 nonmember

Teaching Phonics in Context

Literary Terms

David Hornsby and Lorraine Wilson

Brian Moon

Debunking the myth that whole language teachers do not teach phonics, David Hornsby and Lorraine Wilson use classroom vignettes to show just how phonics is taught and learned in literacy-rich classrooms.

A Practical Glossary Literary Terms: A Practical Glossary provides up-todate definitions, drawing on significant developments in literary theory and emphasizing the role of reading practices in the reproduction of literary meanings.

The book is grounded in the belief that reading and writing of connected text takes priority over the traditional teaching of phonics; that teaching and learning of phonics is always contained within, and subordinate to, genuine literacy events; and that children spend more time reading and writing (in which they learn to apply their phonic knowledge) than they do in the actual study of sound–letter relationships.

This is an excellent resource for high school teachers interested in strengthening appreciation and understanding of the complexities of literary study. NOTE: Customers outside of the United States and Canada should contact Chalkface Press at www.chalkface.net.au for purchasing information. The NCTE Chalkface Series.

Customers outside of North America should contact Pearson Australia at www.pearson.com.au for purchasing information.

177 pp. | 1999 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814130087 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember

254 pp. | 2010 | Grades K–5 | ISBN 9780814152270 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814152287

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Supporting English Learners Transforming Literacy Education for Long-Term English Learners Recognizing Brilliance in the Undervalued Maneka Deanna Brooks Grounded in research on bilingualism and adolescent literacy, this book provides a much-needed insight into the day-to-day needs of students identified as longterm English language learners (LTELs). LTELs are adolescents primarily or solely educated in the US and yet remain identified as “learning English” in secondary school. Challenging the deficit perspective 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. 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. NCTE-Routledge Research Series 112 pp. | 2020 | Grades 9–College | ISBN 9781138558113 $35.21 member/$46.95 nonmember

Writing across Culture and Language Inclusive Strategies for Working with ELL Writers in the ELA Classroom Christina Ortmeier-Hooper Ortmeier-Hooper challenges deficit models of ELL and multilingual writers and offers techniques to help teachers identify their students’ strengths and develop inclusive research-based writing practices that are helpful to all students. Her approach, aligned with specific writing instruction recommendations outlined in the NCTE Position Paper on the Role of English Teachers in Educating English Language Learners (ELLs), connects theory to classroom application, with a focus on writing instruction, response, and assessment for ELL and multilingual students. Through rich examples of these writers and their writing practices, along with “best practices” input from classroom teachers, this book provides accessible explanations of second language writing theory and pedagogy in teacher-friendly language, concrete suggestions for the classroom, guiding questions to support discussion, and an annotated list of resources. 155 pp. | 2017 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814158531 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814158548

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Community Literacies en Confianza Learning from Bilingual After-School Programs Steven Alvarez Most teachers of English language learners are not adequately prepared to meet the challenges of working with this growing demographic of K–12 students. Alvarez argues that teachers’ greatest resources are the students themselves, with both a facility in their home language and ties to their home communities. He highlights the importance of building mutual trust, or confianza, between students, schools, and communities, both inside and outside of the classroom. After-school programs focused on English learners offer a way for parents, teachers, and volunteers to collectively navigate school systems and the English language, share stories, and develop facility in reading and writing across languages. Alvarez offers ideas for approaching, engaging, and partnering with students’ communities to design culturally sustaining pedagogies that productively use the literacy abilities students bring to schools. 107 pp. | 2017 | Grades PreK–12 | ISBN 9780814107867 $19.96 member/$24.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814107874

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English Language Learners in Literacy Workshops Marsha Riddle Buly Many mainstream classroom teachers haven’t had the opportunity to develop strategies to effectively teach the growing number of language learners in our schools. And language specialists aren’t always familiar with the instructional and management frameworks that work well for mainstream teachers. Marsha Riddle Buly, a mainstream classroom teacher who became a reading specialist and then a specialist in bilingual/ELL education, shows how reading, writing, and language workshops can be used to help language learners in mainstream K–8 classrooms. Riddle Buly outlines literacy workshop formats and offers clear explanations of how workshops align with the research on effective instruction of language learners, including the Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol (SIOP). 129 pp. | 2011 | Grades K–8 | ISBN 9780814122884 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Beyond “Teaching to the Test”

Understanding Language

Rethinking Accountability and Assessment for English Language Learners

Melinda J. McBee Orzulak

Betsy Gilliland and Shannon Pella Speaking directly to teachers who work closely with English language learners, Gilliland and Pella examine essential questions in this age of accountability: What kind of accountability measures truly demonstrate multilingual students’ learning? How do these measures reflect the planning and teaching that teachers do to help their students grow? The authors take readers into the classrooms of middle and high school teachers to illustrate accountability practices that exemplify the principles outlined in the NCTE Position Paper on the Role of English Teachers in Educating English Language Learners (ELLs). The authors explain teaching for accountability, formative and summative assessment, and preparation for high-stakes testing, as well as provide suggestions for teaching, guiding questions for discussion, and resource recommendations. 167 pp. | 2017 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814102947 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814102954

Supporting ELL Students in Responsive ELA Classrooms Engaging with critical questions such as “What counts as language?” and “How can I know when a student is struggling with language?,” Melinda J. McBee Orzulak explores how mainstream ELA teachers might begin to understand language in new ways to benefit both English language learner and non-ELL students learning in the same classroom. Offering supportive teaching resources and ways to notice and understand the strengths of ELL students, she outlines strategies for respectful and rigorous instruction for all students as we consider our own cultural and linguistic expectations. She also addresses responses to common curricular challenges such as (1) structuring positive environments for students as both learners and adolescents; (2) providing a language focus in our teaching; and (3) assessing the range of literacies our ELL students possess. 159 pp. | 2017 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814155646 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814155653

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Culturally Affirming Teaching

NEW

Toward a BlackBoyCrit Pedagogy Black Boys, Male Teachers, and Early Childhood Classroom Practices Nathaniel Bryan

NEW

Critical and necessary, this book provides a window into the education and lives of Black boys in early childhood settings. Drawing on Black Critical Theory and Black Male Studies, and applying portraiture methodology, Bryan introduces BlackBoyCrit Pedagogy to explore experiences of Black boys and their male teachers in ways that affirm their humanity and acknowledge the consequences of existing in a white supremacist system. NCTE-Routledge Research Series 184 pp. | 2021 | Grades PreK–3 | ISBN 9780367254032 $36.71 member/$48.95 nonmember

Where Is the Justice? Engaged Pedagogies in Schools and Communities

Critical Race English Education New Visions, New Possibilities

Valerie Kinloch, Emily A. Nemeth, Tamara T. Butler, and Grace D. Player

Lamar L. Johnson

This inspirational book is about engaged pedagogies, an approach to teaching and learning that centers dialogue, listening, equity, and connection among stakeholders who understand the human and ecological cost of inequality.

Afterword by David Stovall

Book Features: ● Provides a sound approach to

deeply taking up the work of justice and engaged pedagogies. ● Presents linguistic, cultural,

theoretical, and practical ideas that can be used and implemented immediately. ● Includes reflective questions,

found poetry, lesson ideas, storytelling as narrative, and examples of engaged pedagogies. ● Shares stories from a district-

wide initiative that embedded engaged pedagogies within classrooms, counseling offices, and libraries. ● Showcases original artwork and

images in full color by Grace D. Player, one of the coauthors. Copublished by Teachers College Press and NCTE. 192 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780807765999 $29.56 member/$36.95 nonmember

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Foreword by Gloria Boutte

NEW

Johnson’s visionary and much-needed book is a call for the transformation of English education to embrace rather than reject Blackness. Employing an original framework, Critical Race English Education, Johnson reveals how English education and ELA classrooms are dominated by eurocentric language and literacy practices, and provides a justice-oriented framework that combats anti-Black racism. Critical Race English Education is a movement for Black lives. NCTE-Routledge Research Series 162 pp. | 2022 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780367276423 $36.71 member/$48.95 nonmember

Transformational Sanctuaries in the Middle Level ELA Classroom Creating Truth Spaces for Black Girls

NEW

Dywanna E. Smith Drawing from an arts-based research and humanizing methodologies, Smith documents transformative and liberatory spaces in ELA middle level classrooms, where students address and counteract discrimination, colorism, sizism, and body shaming. Grounded in an original qualitative study of adolescent Black girls, this book examines how such “truth spaces” serve as a medium for adolescents to self-examine their intersectional identities and give voice to their resilience in the face of marginalization. Incorporating original narratives, including the author’s self-actualizing verse novel and the voices of Black female students, Smith shines a light on new culturally sustaining pedagogies and offers much-needed implications for practice. NCTE-Routledge Research Series 190 pp. | 2022 | Grades 6–9 | ISBN 9780367355449 $36.71 member/$48.95 nonmember

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Toward Culturally Sustaining Teaching Early Childhood Educators Honor Children with Practices for Equity and Change Kindel Turner Nash, Crystal Polite Glover, and Bilal Polson, editors Demonstrating equitable strategies that move toward culturally sustaining teaching such as translanguaging, explorations of children’s literature, alternative modes of literacy assessment, photography and arts integration, student-driven poetry units, and more, this book shares the stories of four teacher-teacher dyads who worked together across university-school contexts to study, generate, and evaluate culturally relevant literacy practices in early childhood classrooms. Highlighting the voices and roles of children, families, community members, and teachers of Color, this book suggests new ways for teachers to build and sustain relationships that are relevant and offers solutions for challenges that arise. The narratives in this collection model how to create positive and mutually beneficial dynamics among teachers, children, and their families and communities. NCTE-Routledge Research Series 168 pp. | 2020 | Grades PreK–2 | ISBN 9780815363774 $36.71 member/$48.95 nonmember

Stories Matter The Complexity of Cultural Authenticity in Children’s Literature Dana L. Fox and Kathy G. Short, editors This collection highlights important historical events, current debates, and new questions and critiques in the controversial issue of cultural authenticity in children’s literature. Contributors include Rudine Sims Bishop, Jacqueline © Susan Guevara 2000 Woodson, Susan Guevara, Kathryn Lasky, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Joel Taxel, and Mingshui Cai. Essays address the social responsibility of authors, the role of imagination and experience in writing for young people, cultural sensitivity and values, authenticity of content and images, authorial freedom, and the role of literature in an education that is multicultural. 340 pp. | 2003 | Grades K–8 | ISBN 9780814147443 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

Restorative Justice in the English Language Arts Classroom Maisha T. Winn, Hannah Graham, and Rita Renjitham Alfred

“A transformative book. If this book is on your to-read list, move it to the top!” —Jessica Variz, Redondo Union High School The authors—two teacher educators and a restorative justice practitioner—provide concrete and specific examples of how English teachers can think and plan using a restorative justice lens to address issues of student disconnection and alienation; adult and youth well-being in schools; and inequity and racial justice through writing, reading, speaking, and action. They examine the intersection of restorative justice and education with a focus on restorative justice processes that are used to promote inclusivity and ownership, and demonstrate how teachers can use their curricular powers with a restorative justice framework in mind to empower the literacy classroom as a space for addressing inequalities across domains. 126 pp. | 2019 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814141014 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814141021

Writing Instruction in the Culturally Relevant Classroom Maisha T. Winn and Latrise P. Johnson Winn and Johnson support an approach to writing instruction that can help all students succeed, and especially those who have been underserved in US classrooms. Through portraits of four high school teachers, they show how to create an environment for effective learning and teaching in diverse classrooms, answering questions such as: ● How can I honor students’ backgrounds and experiences

to help them become better writers? ● How can I teach in a culturally responsive way if I don’t

share cultural identities with my students? ● How can I move beyond a “heroes and holidays”

approach to culturally relevant pedagogy? ● How can I draw on what I already know about good

writing instruction to make my classes more culturally relevant? 101 pp. | 2011 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814158562 $19.96 member/$24.99 nonmember

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Culturally Affirming Teaching NEW

Antibias and Antiracist Teaching QRG The Time Is Always Now Damián Baca, Kathleen Colantonio-Yurko, Lorena Germán, Richard Gorham, Patrick Harris, Keisha Rembert, and Holly Spinelli Drawing on ideas from critical race theory, the Learning for Justice Anchor Standards, and resources created by NCTE's Committee Against Racism and Bias in the Teaching of English, this quick-reference guide offers K–12 ELA educators practical approaches to teaching about antibias and antiracism. Features include two sample lessons, tips on ways to build community between students and educators, and suggested readings for students and for educators’ professional learning. 6 pp. | 2022 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9780814186404 $10.39 member/$12.99 nonmember

Code-Meshing as World English Pedagogy, Policy, Performance Vershawn Ashanti Young and Aja Y. Martinez, editors The original essays in this collection offer various perspectives on why codemeshing—blending minoritized dialects and world Englishes with Standard English—is a better pedagogical alternative than code-switching in the teaching of reading, writing, listening, speaking, and visually representing to diverse learners. Contributors argue that codemeshing leads to lucid, often dynamic prose by people whose first language is something other than English, as well as by native English speakers who speak and write with “accents” and those whose home language or neighborhood dialects are deemed “nonstandard.” 298 pp. | 2011 | College | ISBN 9780814107003 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

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Linguistic Justice Black Language, Literacy, Identity, and Pedagogy April Baker-Bell Bringing together theory, research, and practice to dismantle anti-Black linguistic racism and white linguistic supremacy, this book provides ethnographic snapshots of how Black students navigate and negotiate their linguistic and racial identities across multiple contexts. To move toward Black linguistic liberation, Baker-Bell introduces a new way forward through Antiracist Black Language Pedagogy, a pedagogical approach that intentionally and unapologetically centers the linguistic, cultural, racial, intellectual, and self-confidence needs of Black students. This volume captures what Antiracist Black Language Pedagogy looks like in classrooms while simultaneously illustrating how theory, research, and practice can operate in tandem in pursuit of linguistic and racial justice. NCTE-Routledge Research Series 128 pp. | 2020 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9781138551022 $33.71 member/$44.95 nonmember

Code-Switching Teaching Standard English in Urban Classrooms Rebecca S. Wheeler and Rachel Swords Foreword by John R. Rickford Code-Switching focuses on building on the linguistic knowledge that children bring to school and advocates the use of “code-switching” to enable students to add another linguistic code—Standard English—to their linguistic toolbox. Rather than drill the idea of “Standard English” into students by labeling their home language as “wrong,” the authors offer strategies for teaching students to recognize the grammatical differences between home speech and school speech so that they are then able to choose the language style most appropriate to the time, place, audience, and communicative purpose. Theory and Research Into Practice (TRIP) series 197 pp. | 2006 | Grades K–8 | ISBN 9780814107027 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember

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Social-Emotional Learning CoreEmpathy Literacy Instruction with a Greater Purpose Christie McLean Kesler and Mary Knight The CoreEmpathy approach and accompanying lessons are designed to cultivate student empathy while simultaneously developing and deepening student literacy skills. Aligned with state standards, CoreEmpathy optimizes the interconnection between reading and writing. Student empathy and compassionate living skills are cultivated through the power of story—from stories the authors use in the CoreEmpathy curriculum to favorites already in the classroom. CoreEmpathy reinvigorates the joy in teaching and gives teachers a significant way to make a real difference in their students’ lives. 212 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–6 | ISBN 9780814108680 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814108697

Restorative Justice in the English Language Arts Classroom

Special Issues, Volume 1: TraumaInformed Teaching Cultivating Healing-Centered ELA Classrooms Sakeena Everett, editor This first volume of Special Issues: TraumaInformed Teaching gathers some of the most compelling and practical recent articles across NCTE journals, addressing the importance of trauma-informed teaching and its recent developments in the field. Editor Sakeena Everett has curated this collection to show how to help K–college teachers integrate the most up-todate approaches to trauma-informed teaching into their particular classroom environments. In this volume, you will find valuable insights, diverse perspectives, innovative and exciting pedagogies, as well as thought-provoking research methodologies that engage micro- and macro-level supports you need to get started today. 183 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814144947 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814144954

“A transformative book. If this book is on your to-read list, move it to the top!”

Literacy Instruction for Students Living with Trauma QRG

—Jessica Variz, Redondo

Nancy Akhavan

Maisha T. Winn, Hannah Graham, and Rita Renjitham Alfred

Union High School

The authors—two teacher educators and a restorative justice practitioner—provide concrete and specific examples of how English teachers can think and plan using a restorative justice lens to address issues of student disconnection and alienation; adult and youth wellbeing in schools; and inequity and racial justice through writing, reading, speaking, and action. They examine the intersection of restorative justice and education with a focus on restorative justice processes that are used to promote inclusivity and ownership, and demonstrate how teachers can use their curricular powers with a restorative justice framework in mind to empower the literacy classroom as a space for addressing inequalities across domains. 126 pp. | 2019 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814141014 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814141021

Students living with trauma need literacy instruction that fosters choice, collaboration, action, and problem solving delivered in a classroom that is emotionally safe and with an adult with whom they have a positive, supportive connection. This guide offers a sample lesson plan, examples of authentic reading and writing instruction for students living with trauma, and a focus on the gradual release of responsibility. 6 pp. | 2022 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9780814186091 $10.39 member/$12.99 nonmember

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Journals

Access journals content through NCTE membership or separate subscription today:

Journals | K–9

https://store.ncte.org/shop/journals.

Talking Points Talking Points—published by LLA, Literacies and Languages for All, a conference of NCTE—helps promote literacy research and the use of whole language instruction in classrooms. It provides a forum for parents, classroom teachers, and researchers to reflect about literacy and learning. Published semiannually, October and May Editors: Patricia C. Paugh, University of Massachusetts, Boston, and Sherry Sanden, Goldendale School District, WA

Language Arts Language Arts provides a forum for discussions on all aspects of language arts learning and teaching, primarily as they relate to children in pre-kindergarten through the eighth grade. Issues discuss both theory and classroom practice, highlight current research, and review children’s and young adolescent literature, as well as classroom and professional materials of interest to language arts educators. Published September, November, January, March, May, and July Editors: Rick Coppola, Chicago Public Schools and University of Illinois at Chicago; Sandra L. Osorio, Illinois State University, Normal; and Rebecca Woodard, University of Illinois at Chicago

Voices from the Middle Voices from the Middle publishes original contributions by middle level teachers, students, teacher educators, and researchers in response to specific themes that focus on our discipline, our teaching, and our students. Voices offers middle level teachers innovative and practical ideas for classroom use that are rooted in current research; this is a journal for teachers by teachers. Published September, December, March, and May Editors: Shanetia Clark, Salisbury University, MD; Robyn Seglem, Illinois State University, Normal; and Matt Skillen, Elizabethtown College, PA

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Journals | 7–12 English Journal Published since 1912, English Journal is NCTE’s award-winning journal of ideas for English language arts teachers in junior and senior high schools and middle schools. It presents information on the teaching of writing and reading, literature, and language, and includes information on how teachers are putting the latest technologies to work in their classrooms. Published September, November, January, March, May, and July Editors: Toby Emert, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, GA, and R. Joseph Rodríguez, St. Edward's University, Austin, TX

English Leadership Quarterly English Leadership Quarterly, a publication of the Conference on English Leadership (CEL), helps department chairs, K–12 supervisors, and other leaders in their role of improving the quality of literacy instruction. ELQ offers short articles on a variety of issues important to decision-makers in English language arts. Published August, October, February, and April; published online only. Editor: Elaine Simos, North High School, Downers Grove, IL; Incoming Editor: Henry “Cody” Miller, SUNY Brockport, NY

English Education English Education is the journal of English Language Arts Teacher Educators (ELATE), formerly the Conference on English Education (CEE), a constituent organization of NCTE. The journal serves teachers who are engaged in the preparation, support, and continuing education of teachers of English language arts/literacy at all levels of instruction. Published October, January, April, and July Editor: Melanie Shoffner, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA

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Journals

Journals | College

College Composition and Communication College Composition and Communication publishes research and scholarship in rhetoric and composition studies that support college teachers in reflecting on and improving their practices in teaching writing. Reflecting the most current scholarship and theory in the field, the journal draws on a broad range of humanistic disciplines and from subfields including technical communication, computers and composition, and writing across the curriculum. Features include review essays of current scholarship and response articles knows as Interchanges. Published September, December, February, and June Editor: Malea Powell, Michigan State University, East Lansing

Forum: Issues about Part-Time and Contingent Faculty Subscribers to CCC and TETYC also get access to Forum: Issues about Part-Time and Contingent Faculty, a peer-reviewed publication concerning working conditions, professional life, activism, and perspectives of non-tenure-track faculty in college composition and communication. It is published twice annually (alternately in the September issue of CCC and the March issue of TETYC) and is sponsored by the Conference on College Composition and Communication. Faculty and scholars from all academic positions are welcome to contribute. Forum is also available online (open access) at https://cccc.ncte.org/cccc/forum. Editor: Trace Daniels-Lerberg, University of Utah, Salt Lake City

Teaching English in the Two-Year College Teaching English in the Two-Year College, the journal of the Two-Year College English Association (TYCA), is for instructors of English studies in the two-year college. TETYC publishes theoretical and practical articles on composition, developmental studies, technical and business communication, literature, creative expression, language, and the profession. Published September, December, March, and May Editor: Darin Jensen, Salt Lake Community College, UT

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Journals | College

Research in the Teaching of English RTE is a broad-based, multidisciplinary journal composed of original research articles and short scholarly essays on a wide range of topics significant to those concerned with the teaching and learning of languages and literacies around the world, both in and beyond schools and universities. Published August, November, February, and May Editors: Gerald Campano, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; Amy Stornaiuolo, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; and Ebony Elizabeth Thomas, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

College English College English is the professional journal for the college scholarteacher. CE publishes articles about literature, rhetoric-composition, critical theory, creative writing theory and pedagogy, linguistics, literacy, reading theory, pedagogy, and professional issues related to the teaching of English. Issues may also include review essays. Published September, November, January, March, May, and July Editor: Melissa Ianetta, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta Incoming Editor: Lori Ostergaard, Oakland University, Rochester, MI

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Special Issues Special Issues, Volume 1: Racial Literacy Implications for Curriculum, Pedagogy, and Policy

NEW

Detra Price-Dennis, editor There’s a great deal of uncertainty, discord, and increased volatility across a number of critical institutions in our society. Each day on social media and TV news outlets we read, listen to, and/or watch events unfold that are linked to political, economic, health, legal, and educational inequities that can be traced to racist ideologies and practices. Public schools across the country are being subjected to pending state legislation and new laws that seek to limit how race—among other markers of identity—can be taught in K–12 classrooms. This first volume of Special Issues: Racial Literacy gathers some of the most compelling and practical recent articles across NCTE journals, addressing the importance of racial literacy and its implications for curriculum, pedagogy, and policy. Editor Detra Price-Dennis has curated this collection to show how teaching from a racial literacy perspective is in conversation with antiracist, culturally responsive, equity-oriented frameworks that uplift curriculum design and instructional strategies. These articles can help educators (re) imagine the classroom as a space that supports the development of racial literacy skills and practices with their students. 171 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814144923 | ebook: ISBN 9780814144930 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Special Issues, Volume 1: Critical Media Literacy Bringing Lives to Texts

NEW

Tom Liam Lynch, editor Critical media literacy is not a single star burning brightly in the night sky. It is more like a constellation, a collection of stars that tell a story about how educators engage with young people through an array of communicative modes in the spirit of inquiry, society, and action. Edited by Tom Liam Lynch, this collection of essays drawn from NCTE’s many journals provides an excellent starting point for teachers who want to bring critical media literacy into their K–12 and college classrooms. 178 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814144893 | ebook: ISBN 9780814144916 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

Special Issues, Volume 1: Trauma-Informed Teaching NEW Cultivating Healing-Centered ELA Classrooms Sakeena Everett, editor We live in a time that requires attention to trauma. Educators and students are learning how to move forward in this precarious time, which in many ways has amplified preexisting health, racial, economic, and educational inequalities. The pandemic has shaped us in ways we have yet to understand fully, but we know we must adapt and heal together. It is imperative that K–college educators not only consider trauma-informed teaching, but also healing-centered teaching practices. As we think through ways to support the most harmed people in our teaching and learning communities, we will move closer to a more equitable and just healing-centered profession. This first volume of Special Issues: Trauma-Informed Teaching gathers some of the most compelling and practical recent articles across NCTE journals, addressing the importance of trauma-informed teaching and its recent developments in the field. Editor Sakeena Everett has curated this collection to show how to help K–college teachers integrate the most up-to-date approaches to trauma-informed teaching into their particular classroom environments. In this volume, you will find valuable insights, diverse perspectives, innovative and exciting pedagogies, as well as thought-provoking research methodologies that engage micro- and macro-level supports you need to get started today. 183 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814144947 | ebook: ISBN 9780814144954 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

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Curriculum Connections Reading and Teaching with Diverse Nonfiction Children’s Books Representations and Possibilities Thomas Crisp, Suzanne M. Knezek, and Roberta Price Gardner, editors This edited collection brings together ongoing professional conversations about diverse children’s books and the role and function of nonfiction and informational text in K–8 classrooms. At a time in which truth, science, and reality are under attack, this volume challenges the fields of children’s literature and education to evolve, expand, and divest from the selective tradition and limited literary canons. Each chapter features an overview of relevant texts, criteria for selecting and evaluating nonfiction literature, practical pedagogical strategies, connections to primary sources, and a description of our contemporary context alongside arguments for why it is essential that educators include this literature in their classrooms, curricula, and libraries. 292 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–8 | ISBN 9780814139974 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814139981

50 Award-Winning Children’s Book Authors Share the Secret of Engaging Writing Melissa Stewart, editor In Nonfiction Writers Dig Deep, some of today’s most celebrated writers for children share essays that describe a critical part of the informational writing process that is often left out of classroom instruction. To craft engaging nonfiction, professional writers choose topics that fascinate them and explore concepts and themes that reflect their passions, personalities, beliefs, and experiences in the world. By scrutinizing the information they collect to make their own personal meaning, they create distinctive books that delight as well as inform. In addition to essays from mentor authors, the book includes a wide range of tips, tools, teaching strategies, and activity ideas from editor Melissa Stewart to help students (1) choose a topic, (2) focus that topic by identifying a core idea, theme, or concept, and (3) analyze their research to find a personal connection. By adding a piece of themselves to their drafts, students will learn to craft rich, unique prose. 190 pp. | 2020 | Grades K–12 | ISBN 9780814133521 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814133545

Making Curriculum Pop Developing Literacies in All Content Areas Pam Goble and Ryan R. Goble From body art to baseball cards, comics to cathedrals, pie charts to power ballads . . . students need help navigating today’s media-rich world. And educators need help teaching today’s new media literacy. To be literate now means being able to read, write, listen, speak, view, and represent across all media—including both print and nonprint texts, such as film, TV, podcasts, websites, visual art, fashion, architecture, landscape, and music. This book offers secondary teachers in all content areas a flexible, interdisciplinary approach to integrate these literacies into their curriculum. Students form cooperative learning groups to evaluate media texts from various perspectives (artist, producer, sociologist, sound mixer, economist, poet, set designer, and more) and show their thinking using unique graphic organizers aligned to the Common Core State Standards. Digital content includes full-color reproducible student forms. Free Spirit Publishing and NCTE 213 pp. | 2016 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9781631980619 $39.99 member/nonmember

Nonfiction Writers Dig Deep

The Power of Picture Books Using Content Area Literature in Middle School Mary Jo Fresch and Peggy Harkins Picture books aren’t just for little kids. They are powerful and engaging texts that can help all middle school students succeed in language arts, math, science, social studies, and the arts. Picture books appeal to students of all readiness levels, interests, and learning styles. Featuring descriptions and activities for fifty exceptional titles, Mary Jo Fresch and Peggy Harkins offer a wealth of ideas for harnessing the power of picture books to improve reading and writing in the content areas. By incorporating picture books into the classroom, teachers across the disciplines can introduce new topics into their curriculum, help students develop nonfiction literacy skills, provide authentic and meaningful cultural perspectives, and help meet a wide range of learning needs. 147 pp. | 2009 | Grades 5–8 | ISBN 9780814136331 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814136317

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Curriculum Connections Compose Our World

A Symphony of Possibilities

Project-Based Learning in Secondary English Language Arts Alison G. Boardman, Antero Garcia, Bridget Dalton, and Joseph L. Polman Learn how to develop and sustain multimodal, project-based learning (PBL) instruction in secondary English language arts classrooms. National standards encourage authentic forms of reading, writing, and communication that can support college and career readiness, and this book highlights PBL as a powerful way to harness students’ interests and engage them in academically rigorous learning. The authors provide specific, researchinformed curricular approaches and instructional guidance for classroom teachers, as well as an overview of the dimensions of PBL that are often overlooked in the broad expectations of inquiry-based teaching. Instead of “quick fix” lessons, Compose Our World explores how core dimensions of equitable teaching—such as social and emotional support, universal design for learning, and cultivating classroom community—function as the bedrock for student success in PBL contexts and beyond. Teachers College Press, NCTE, and the National Writing Project

A Handbook for Arts Integration in Secondary English Language Arts Katherine J. Macro and Michelle Zoss, editors A Symphony of Possibilities explores arts-based pedagogies for secondary teachers of English language arts. Drama, music, poetry, public art, and visual art are explored in detail by experts in their fields sharing proven methods of instruction with secondary students and teachers. Each chapter looks at effective teaching methods that incorporate the arts into secondary English classrooms. Through the arts we see teachers and researchers who explore and expand upon comprehension, memory, issues of identity, and culturally relevant pedagogies. The arts challenge students to approach course material in personal and interactive ways. This book provides a resource for teachers who are looking for creative approaches to their teaching that will allow them to move their students into innovative and thoughtful learning spaces. 240 pp. | 2019 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814149713 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814149720

Teaching YA Lit through Differentiated Instruction

224 pp. | 2021 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780807764541 $22.46 member/$29.95 nonmember

Discussion Pathways to Literacy Learning

Susan L. Groenke and Lisa Scherff Foreword by Alan Sitomer Authors Susan L. Groenke and Lisa Scherff offer suggestions for incorporating YA lit into the high school curriculum by focusing on a few key questions:

Thomas M. McCann, Elizabeth A. Kahn, and Carolyn C. Walter This book examines the function of classroom discussion as an essential element in inquiry and literacy learning, providing examples of classroom discussion activities that have been part of an ongoing partnership between university professors and high school English teachers. The book draws on their research into the effect of discussion on literacy learning and offers examples of activities and guidelines for activities that teachers can use in their own practice. Through real classroom discussions, the authors show how participation in discussions can be pleasurable and meaningful experiences for adolescents, especially when they can choose the focus for their shared inquiry. 156 pp. | 2018 | Grades 9–College | ISBN 9780814112113 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814112120 44

● Which works of YA literature work better for whole-class

instruction and which are more suitable for independent reading and/or small-group activities? ● What can teachers do with YA lit in whole-class

instruction? ● How can teachers use YA novels to address the needs of

diverse readers in mixed-ability classrooms? Each chapter opens with an introduction to and description of a different popular genre or award category of YA lit—science fiction, realistic teen fiction, graphic novels, Pura Belpré Award winners, nonfiction texts, poetry, historical YA fiction—and then offers suggestions within that genre for whole-class instruction juxtaposed with a young adult novel more suited for independent reading or small-group activities. 177 pp. | 2010 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814133705 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember

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Say Yes to Pears Food Literacy in and beyond the English Classroom Joseph Franzen and Brent Peters

“Joe and Brent’s passion for edible education shines in this amazingly comprehensive book!” —Alice Waters, owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant and founder of the Edible Schoolyard Project

In 2010 Fern Creek High School in Louisville, Kentucky, was labeled failing by the state and had half of its teachers removed. Brent Peters, a former chef and current English teacher, and Joe Franzen, an eccentric urban homesteader and history teacher, were hired to help ignite students’ passion for learning. Say Yes to Pears tells the story of food literacy at Fern Creek High School and about how Food Lit works in the English classroom, beyond the English classroom, and beyond the school day. The book serves as a pedagogical guide on how to construct a place- and community-based program focused on creative and critical thought and action. 179 pp. | 2019 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814142417 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814142424

A Guide for the English Classroom Alan Brown and Luke Rodesiler, editors With seven interrelated sections— facilitating literature study, providing alternatives to traditional novels, teaching writing, engaging students in inquiry and research, fostering media and digital literacies, promoting social justice, and developing out-of-school literacies—this collection of lessons and commentaries from established teachers, teacher educators, scholars, and authors, as well as the companion website, provide numerous resources that support teachers in developing students’ contemporary literacies through sports. Each section includes (1) four lesson plans written by practicing English teachers and teacher educators that focus on a specific topic and/or method of instruction; (2) a brief introduction from a leading scholar in the field of English education; and (3) a closing “author connection” in which contemporary authors of sports-related young adult literature offer reflections on and connections to the ongoing conversations. 253 pp. | 2016 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814110959 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814110966

Making Middle School Cultivating Critical Literacy and Interdisciplinary Learning in Maker Spaces Steve Fulton and Cynthia D. Urbanski Eighth-grade English teacher Steve Fulton and science teacher Tiffany Green explore the intersections between critical literacy and science through maker spaces alongside their students. With thinking partner Cindy Urbanski, they use the idea of make to center as well as democratize student learning in their classrooms, backloading English and science standards while front-loading the current focus on STEAM. Making—following one’s own desire to create—is based on principles of connected learning; it is student-directed and organic, without a scripted route or destination. By looking closely at the real work of teachers and students, Fulton and Urbanski illustrate the rich and real applications of a make-based approach in today’s middle school classrooms. 128 pp. | 2020 | Grades 6–8 | ISBN 9780814130667 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814130674

Developing Contemporary Literacies through Sports

Teaching Climate Change to Adolescents Reading, Writing, and Making a Difference Richard Beach, Jeff Share, and Allen Webb This book is THE essential resource for middle and high school English language arts teachers to help their students understand and address the urgent issues and challenges facing life on Earth today. Classroom activities written and used by teachers show students posing questions, engaging in argumentative reading and writing and critical analysis, interpreting portrayals of climate change in literature and media, and adopting advocacy stances to promote change. The book illustrates climate change fitting into existing courses using already available materials and gives teachers tools and teaching ideas to support building this into their own classrooms. Visit the website for this book (http:// climatechangeela.pbworks.com) for additional information and links. All royalties from the sale of this book are donated to Alliance for Climate Education. Routledge and NCTE 148 pp. | 2017 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9781138245259 $27.95 member/$34.95 nonmember

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High School Literature Series The Incarceration of Japanese Americans in the 1940s Literature for the High School Classroom Rachel Endo

“Thank you, NCTE, for publishing this important volume of literature!” —Tricia Ebarvia, cofounder of #DisruptTexts, Berwyn, PA

Endo offers new ways to talk and teach about the incarceration of Japanese Americans in the United States during World War II through the selected works of critically acclaimed Japanese American authors Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, Lawson Fusao Inada, and Hisaye Yamamoto. 161 pp. | 2018 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814122983 ebook: ISBN 9780814123003

The Great Gatsby in the Classroom Searching for the American Dream David Dowling Veteran high school English teacher David Dowling demonstrates how teachers can help students connect The Great Gatsby to the value systems of the twenty-first century, offering active reading and thinking strategies designed to enhance higher-level thinking and personal responses to fiction. 137 pp. | 2006 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814150986

Zora Neale Hurston in the Classroom “With a harp and a sword in my hands” Renée H. Shea and Deborah L. Wilchek The book offers a practical approach using a range of student-centered activities for teaching Hurston’s nonfiction, short stories, and the print and film versions of Their Eyes Were Watching God. 113 pp. | 2009 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814159750

Judith Ortiz Cofer in the Classroom “A Woman in Front of the Sun” Carol Jago What if reading the poetry and fiction of Judith Ortiz Cofer, or the writing of other multicultural authors, “engaged your students in such deep reading and writing that their scores went through the roof?” In this practical guide, Carol Jago argues that the curriculum should embrace all kinds of literature because such a curriculum keeps students both engaged and challenged. 82 pp. | 2006 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814125359

Sandra Cisneros in the Classroom “Do not forget to reach” Carol Jago This handy volume provides biographical information, including an interview with Sandra Cisneros; activities to help students use Cisneros’s nonfiction and fiction as models for their own personal writing; methods for weaving literary terminology into the experience of literature study; samples of critical essays suitable for sharing with students; and lists of further resources for teaching both Cisneros’s works and literature in general. 95 pp. | 2002 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814142318

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Alice Walker in the Classroom “Living by the Word” Carol Jago Carol Jago offers readers a handy guide for bringing this celebrated writer’s work into the classroom, including biographical information, ideas for literature circles using Walker’s short stories, sample writing lessons using Walker’s poems, suggestions for teaching The Color Purple, and a wealth of resources for further investigation of Alice Walker and her work. 73 pp. | 2000 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814101148

Tim O’Brien in the Classroom “This too is true: Stories can save us” Barry Gilmore and Alexander Kaplan This practical volume focuses on teaching O’Brien’s works, including The Things They Carried, and offers opportunities for classroom discussion and writing assignments to initiate discussions with your students about the reliability of memory, the purpose of storytelling, and the origins of fiction. 106 pp. | 2007 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814154663

Langston Hughes in the Classroom “Do Nothin’ till You Hear from Me” Carmaletta M. Williams Williams provides high school teachers with background on Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance as well as help in teaching Hughes’s poetry, short stories, novels, and autobiography. 124 pp. | 2006 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814125618

Amy Tan in the Classroom “The art of invisible strength” Renée H. Shea and Deborah L. Wilchek Renée Shea and Deborah Wilchek offer high school teachers an activitybased approach to teaching the works of Amy Tan, especially The Joy Luck Club and The Opposite of Fate. This is a useful resource that will enliven your literature classroom with exciting and enriching studentcentered activities. 128 pp. | 2005 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814101483

Nikki Giovanni in the Classroom “The same ol’ danger but a brand new pleasure” Carol Jago The first volume in the NCTE High School Literature Series features primary source materials including many of Giovanni’s poems reprinted in full, easily adaptable lessons and activities, and a resource section for students and teachers wishing to study Giovanni’s work further. An invaluable resource for teachers already teaching the work of Giovanni and for those seeking to diversify their literature curriculum. 78 pp. | 1999 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814152126

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Shakespeare Bring on the Bard Active Drama Approaches for Shakespeare’s Diverse Student Readers Kevin Long and Mary T. Christel As Shakespeare remains a staple of English language arts curricula, evolving standards challenge teachers to put students—not a text—at the center of a reading experience in order to support diverse readers and learners. Active drama approaches position students to engage with a rich text through lowrisk speaking and improvisation activities as a part of any ELA classroom. The Folio Technique builds on those activities and introduces students to the clues Shakespeare built into his text that allow actors to efficiently understand their characters’ text, context, and subtext. Teachers can use excerpts from the First Folio of 1623 along with a mass market paperback or digital edition of a play to get closer to Shakespeare’s intentions and to explore the challenges the Bard’s modern editors face. This text offers suggestions for using parallel text, graphic, and abridged editions of Shakespeare’s works as well as activities using “cue scripts” and a variety of viewing experiences. 244 pp. | 2019 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814103821 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814103838

Reading Shakespeare Film First Mary Ellen Dakin Foreword by Alan B. Teasley Mary Ellen Dakin asserts that we need to read Shakespeare in triplicate—as the stuff of transformative literature, theater, and film. She guides teachers and students with carefully researched and classroomtested strategies for crossing over from Shakespeare’s early modern English to modern film and illustrated productions of his plays. Through a wealth of classroom vignettes, lessons, and handouts, we see how the “old” language of Shakespeare is constantly renewed through the “new” language of film. 179 pp. | 2012 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814139073 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814139080

Reading Shakespeare with Young Adults Mary Ellen Dakin Although the works of William Shakespeare are universally taught in high schools, many students have a similar reaction when confronted with the difficult task of reading Shakespeare for the first time. In Reading Shakespeare with Young Adults, Mary Ellen Dakin seeks to help teachers better understand not just how to teach the Bard’s work, but also why. By celebrating the collaborative reading of Shakespeare’s plays, Dakin explores different methods for getting students engaged in—and excited about—the texts as they learn to construct meaning from Shakespeare’s sixteenth-century language and connect it to their twenty-first-century lives. Filled with teacher-tested classroom activities, this book draws on often-taught plays, including Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, Julius Caesar, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. 233 pp. | 2009 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814139042 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

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Teaching Macbeth A Differentiated Approach

NEW Available April 2022

Lyn Fairchild Hawks Macbeth, a story of ambition, terror, and conscience, speaks to our students and our era. Through differentiated instruction, Lyn Fairchild Hawks offers ways to engage all students with different readiness levels and interests. With lessons highlighting key scenes, film analysis activities, close reading assignments, and preassessments and summative assessments, this guide offers a wide range of exciting options to challenge your learners. With independent reading matches linked by theme, activities and projects mirroring professional roles, and relevance hooks to meet students’ interests, Macbeth can come alive for all students. Included are DIY tips for lesson design and a companion website with over 40 ready-to-use handouts. 280 pp. | 2022 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814151812 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814151228

Teaching Julius Caesar

Teaching Romeo and Juliet

A Differentiated Approach

A Differentiated Approach

Lyn Fairchild Hawks

Delia DeCourcy, Lyn Fairchild, and Robin Follet

Julius Caesar continues to resonate with high school students and remains a favorite text in classrooms everywhere. Through differentiated instruction, Lyn Fairchild Hawks offers solutions for bringing the play to life for all students— those with various interests, readiness levels, and learning styles. This book is a comprehensive curriculum for teaching the play and offers: ● lesson plans highlighting key scenes ● mini-lessons for reading and writing ● performance activities ● close reading assignments for ELL, novice, on-target,

and advanced learners ● quizzes, writing assignments, and compacting guidelines

A companion website features additional student assessment and teaching materials that may be used in conjunction with this book.

Romeo and Juliet is one of Shakespeare’s mosttaught plays, yet teachers are always looking for new and effective ways to make the material engaging and adaptable for all students—from those struggling to read to those able to analyze complicated sonnets. By using the concept of differentiated instruction, authors Delia DeCourcy, Lyn Fairchild, and Robin Follet provide a practical, easy-to-use guide for teaching the play that addresses a wide range of student readiness levels, interests, and learning styles. An entire curriculum for teaching the play, the book features lesson plans, scaffolded reading activities, quizzes, mini-lessons, compacting guidelines, and close reader handouts—all geared toward different levels of readiness. 308 pp. | 2007 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814101124 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

219 pp. | 2010 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814151082 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember

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Poetry Teach Living Poets Lindsay Illich and Melissa Alter Smith Teach Living Poets opens up the flourishing world of contemporary poetry to secondary teachers, giving advice on discovering new poets and reading contemporary poetry, as well as sharing sample lessons, writing prompts, and ways to become an engaged member of a professional learning community. This approach offers rich opportunities for students to improve critical reading and writing, opportunities for self-expression and social-emotional learning, and perhaps the most desirable outcome, the opportunity to fall in love with language and discover (or renew) their love of reading. The many poems included in Teach Living Poets are representative of the diverse poets writing today. 200 pp. | 2021 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814152614 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook ISBN: 9780814152621

Empowering Students’ Knowledge of Vocabulary

Lightning Paths 75 Poetry Writing Exercises Kyle Vaughn

This fun and practical book offers grades 3–5 teachers both the research and dayto-day practical activities that support a fascinating approach for empowering their students’ vocabulary. Students will develop a deeper understanding of how the English language works, enrich their vocabularies, and improve their reading and writing skills. Six chapters present definitions and playful examples (in poetry and prose) to teach antonyms, synonyms, acronyms (and many more “nyms”), similes, metaphors, idioms, shades of meaning, and word origins. Eight well-known children’s poets and authors, including two former US Young People’s Poets Laureate—Kenn Nesbitt and Margarita Engle—and world-renowned Jane Yolen, offer insights into language choices.

Lightning Paths features poetry writing exercises that, while they teach and utilize technique, also focus on and inspire the intuitive and imaginative qualities of poetry. Each exercise features a philosophical introduction that explains the nature of what the exercise aims for, the detailed exercise instructions, and a student example. The exercises themselves are divided into three sections: (1) exercises that focus on different types of imagery and different methods to generate fresh imagery; (2) exercises born out of unusual prompts and ideas aimed at engaging a writer’s experiences beyond poetry in the real world; and (3) exercises related to form or perhaps a reconsideration of what form might be or how it might function. Also included are introductions or essays related to imagery, inspiration, “leaping” poetry, and constrained writing.

166 pp. | 2020 | Grades 3–5 | ISBN 9780814113370 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814113387

121 pp. | 2018 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814128213 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814128237

Learning How Language Works, Grades 3–5 Mary Jo Fresch and David L. Harrison

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360 Degrees of Text Using Poetry to Teach Close Reading and Powerful Writing Eileen Murphy Buckley Youth culture is rich with poetry, from song lyrics that teens read, listen to, and write, to poetry they perform through slams and open mics. The rich, compact language of poetry both inside and outside the classroom plays a valuable role in bridging the divide between youth culture and academic culture. Whether we call it “critical literacy” or just “making meaning,” being able to read and analyze with precision and judgment empowers all students, not just in their academic courses but in everyday situations that require thoughtful evaluation and response. Through Eileen Murphy Buckley’s 360-degree approach to teaching critical literacy, students investigate texts through a full spectrum of learning modalities, harnessing the excitement of performance, imitation, creative writing, and argument/debate activities to become more powerful thinkers, readers, and writers. Theory and Research Into Practice (TRIP) series

Wordplaygrounds Reading, Writing, and Performing Poetry in the English Classroom John S. O’Connor

“Wow, so good! I keep thinking ‘How has this book escaped my notice all these years!’” —Brett Vogelsinger, English teacher, Holicong Middle School, Doylestown, PA

John S. O’Connor offers exciting approaches to teaching poetry in middle school and high school classrooms with more than 25 highinterest activities designed to sharpen students’ writing and self-understanding and heighten their awareness of the world around them. In the process, he demystifies poetry for teachers and students by using students’ own life experiences as the basis for all student writing. Wordplaygrounds shows how students can move beyond the traditional boundaries of English curricula, interpreting poetry through a variety of media, including music, art, and dance— without special talent and training in these areas. 155 pp. | 2004 | Grades 7–12 | ISBN 9780814158197

$23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

193 pp. | 2011 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814160237 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember

Teaching Poetry in High School Albert B. Somers Albert Somers offers a vast compendium of resources in a highly accessible format. A comprehensive resource for teachers, the book contains more than 40 complete poems and presents practical ideas and myriad ways for teachers and students to discover the joys of poetry. 234 pp. | 1999 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814152898 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember

Getting the Knack 20 Poetry Writing Exercises Stephen Dunning and William Stafford A perennial bestseller and favorite of teachers nationwide, Getting the Knack offers 20 poetry writing exercises in an easy-to-use, winning style. Dunning and Stafford, both widely known poets and educators, offer this delightful manual of ideas for teaching everything from found poems to headline poems to letter poems, acrostic poems, and pantoums. Each exercise covers different types or phases of poetry writing—and is presented with wit, humor, and a nonacademic style that makes it a perfect guide for novice and experienced poets (and teachers!) of all ages. 203 pp. | 1992 | Grades 6–12 | ISBN 9780814118481 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember

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Media & Digital Literacies Using Film to Unlock Textual Literacy A Teacher's Guide Robert Bryant Crisp

NEW

Struggling to help students engage with print texts? Looking for ways to help them learn to analyze texts deeply in a handson, differentiated, and real-world environment? Using Film to Unlock Textual Literacy explores strategies for using film study and filmmaking to help students engage in entirely new ways with both print and digital texts. From basic team building, storyboarding, and filming-with-yourphone-camera activities to deeper dives into adapting texts, making directorial choices, and guiding audience response through texts, Crisp proves that you can teach film study even without specialized training. Texts incorporated into lessons include “Casey at the Bat,” 42, E. T., “Everyday Use,” Othello, Edward Scissorhands, “The Cremation of Sam McGee,” Unbroken, and more. Resources include a list of film vocabulary, observation charts and rubrics, storyboard templates, and sample film technique assessments. 241 pp. | 2021 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814154465 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814154472

Reading in the Dark Using Film as a Tool in the English Classroom John Golden John Golden provides a lively, practical guide to help teachers feel comfortable and confident about using film in new and different ways. The book makes direct links between film and literary study by addressing reading strategies (e.g., predicting, responding, questioning, and storyboarding) and key aspects of textual analysis (e.g., characterization, point of view, irony, and connections between directorial and authorial choices). More than 30 films are used as examples to explain key terminology and cinematic effects. Appendixes include a glossary of film terms, blank activity charts, and an annotated resource list. 175 pp. | 2001 | Grades 9–12 ISBN 9780814138724 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

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Special NEW Issues, Volume 1: Critical Media Literacy Bringing Lives to Texts Tom Liam Lynch, editor Critical media literacy is not a single star burning brightly in the night sky. It is more like a constellation, a collection of stars that tell a story about how educators engage with young people through an array of communicative modes in the spirit of inquiry, society, and action. Edited by Tom Liam Lynch, this collection of essays drawn from NCTE’s many journals provides an excellent starting point for teachers who want to bring critical media literacy into their K–12 and college classrooms. 178 pp. | 2021 | Grades K–College | ISBN 9780814144893 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814144916

Reading in the Reel World

Great Films and How to Teach Them

Teaching Documentaries and Other Nonfiction Texts

William V. Costanzo

John Golden Foreword by Alan B. Teasley Golden offers middle and high school teachers a practical guide for using documentary film to improve students’ reading, writing, and thinking skills. With classroom-tested activities, ready-tocopy handouts, and extensive lists of resources, including a glossary of film terminology, an index of documentaries by category, and an annotated list of additional resources, Golden discusses more than 30 films and gives teachers the tools they need to effectively teach nonfiction texts using popular documentaries such as Hoop Dreams, Spellbound, and Super Size Me. 285 pp. | 2006 | Grades 7–12 ISBN 9780814138755 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

This book offers teachers a relevant way to engage their students through a medium that students know and love. The first part of the book explores the business, theory, technology, and history of film and provides background on adapting fiction to film and using film in the English class. The second part offers study guides for 14 films: Casablanca, North by Northwest, To Kill a Mockingbird, Zeffirelli’s Romeo and Juliet, The Godfather, One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Glory, Mississippi Masala, Schindler’s List, The Shawshank Redemption, Run Lola Run, The Matrix, Bend It Like Beckham, and Whale Rider. Three appendixes and a glossary of film terms round out the book’s many teacher resources. 329 pp. | 2004 | Grades 9–College ISBN 9780814139097 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

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Professional Learning and Support Continuing the Journey Becoming a Better Teacher of Literature and Informational Texts Leila Christenbury and Ken Lindblom Aimed at accomplished veteran teachers, Continuing the Journey offers practical advice, encouragement, and cutting-edge ideas for today’s English classroom. Coauthors Christenbury and Lindblom, wellknown teachers, writers, and former editors of English Journal, are joined in this book by almost two dozen classroom teachers and researchers. Together they present real strategies for real classrooms and offer teachers ideas, insights, and support. Focused on literature and informational texts, this lively book (the first in a series) is a road map to professional renewal and to becoming a better teacher. Topics include:

Becoming a Better Teacher | Secondary

Becoming a better teacher is a continuous journey­—ever learning and growing in our knowledge and skills. NCTE’s Continuing the Journey book series, from veteran teachers Leila Christenbury and Ken Lindblom, offers advanced approaches to teaching English language arts and bridges research to practice in professional learning.

● Changes in you, your classroom, and your school ● What it means to be a better teacher ● Teaching literary texts and literary nonfiction ● Incorporating the study of informational texts and of social

media in your classroom 196 pp. | 2017 | Grades 9-12 | ISBN 9780814108543 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814108550

Continuing the Journey 2 Becoming a Better Teacher of Authentic Writing Ken Lindblom and Leila Christenbury

Continuing the Journey 3 Becoming a Better Teacher of Language, Speaking, and Listening Ken Lindblom and Leila Christenbury In this third book in the Continuing the Journey series, aimed at veteran teachers yet accessible to highly capable early career teachers, Ken Lindblom and Leila Christenbury explore teaching English language, speaking, and listening. Drawing on contemporary and foundational research to infuse classrooms with substance and energy, the authors focus on authentic assignments with real-world value. As an added benefit, teachers and scholars from across the country add their voices and experiences in the ideal Teachers’ Lounge, providing important and diverse perspectives and advice.

Ken Lindblom and Leila Christenbury return with the second volume in the Continuing the Journey series, this time focusing on authentic writing instruction for the high school classroom. The authors draw on what research has taught them about writing—concepts deeply rooted in personal identity and real-world experience—and why we must teach writing accurately, effectively, and fearlessly. As in the previous volume, the book includes visits to an ideal Teachers’ Lounge, featuring highly experienced colleagues and well-known authors in English teaching. Topics covered include responding to student writing, handling the paper load, and seeking real-world feedback.

Packed with classroom-ready approaches, provocative ideas, encouraging insights, as well as the authors’ anecdotes and asides, this book will entertain, educate, and inspire teachers who take seriously the importance of language, speaking, and listening in today’s dynamic world.

180 pp. | 2018 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814108574 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814108598

181 pp. | 2019 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814108642 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814108659

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Professional Learning and Support

Secondary

On the Case in the English Language Arts Classroom

NEW

Situations for the Teaching of English Thomas M. McCann, Elizabeth A. Kahn, Sarah Hochstetler, and Dianne Chambers Foreword by Peter Smagorinsky Being a high school English teacher is both rewarding and difficult. Although teacher education programs try to be thorough, they can’t prepare preservice teachers for every situation that might arise. For instance: ● How can an ELA teacher work with learners who have suffered

significant trauma? ● How can a well-prepared literature instructor teach high school students

the basics of reading? ● Should a teacher shy away from classroom conversations because they

can become “too political”? ● How does a teacher contend with a crushing workload?

Four veteran teacher educators offer twenty case narratives as well as a format for discussion, professional resources that can inform decisions, and a guide to constructing new case narratives that can expand the possibilities for developing powerful problem-solving strategies. 150 pp. | 2022 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814134214 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814134238

Letting Go How to Give Your Students Control over Their Learning in the English Classroom Meg Donhauser, Cathy Stutzman, and Heather Hersey This book explores an inquiry approach in which students differentiate their own learning with the space to choose texts, develop questions, and practice skills that are unique to their individual needs. Rooted in the Inquiry Learning Plan (ILP), a flexible tool that allows students to engineer their own goals and create an authentic final assessment, this practical approach provides a clear, customizable experience for teachers looking to shift ownership of learning to the student, whether wholly or in part. The authors—two classroom teachers and a school librarian—discuss strategies to scaffold the inquiry process while addressing the common pitfalls students encounter. Student examples of activities, reflections, and final products provide concrete models of how to use the strategies separately and how they relate.

Building the English Classroom Foundations, Support, Success Bruce M. Penniman Bruce M. Penniman draws on his nearly four decades of classroom experiences to offer guidance and support for managing the myriad demands of teaching secondary English. From addressing the numerous subdisciplines within English to making individual accommodations, from dealing with being the primary locus of literacy instruction in the school to everyday organizational strategies, Penniman helps teachers find a way to impose order on what often seems like an overwhelming array of responsibilities. 253 pp. | 2009 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814103869 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

196 pp. | 2018 | Grades 9–12 | ISBN 9780814128046 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814128060

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College English Studies Reimagined A New Context for Linguistics, Rhetoric and Composition, Creative Writing, Literature, Cultural Studies, and English Education

NEW

Bruce McComiskey, editor As much of English studies remains entrenched in nationalist discourses, McComiskey and the contributors to this volume argue that English studies must shift from a national to a global orientation in order to remain relevant. This sequel to McComiskey’s 2006 edited collection English Studies: An Introduction to the Discipline(s) features chapters by Jacquelyn Rahman (linguistics), Victor Villanueva (rhetoric and composition), Sarah Sandman (creative writing), Richard C. Taylor (literature and literary criticism), Jeffrey J. Williams (critical theory and cultural studies), and Tonya B. Perry (English education). 210 pp. | 2022 | College | ISBN 9780814115411 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814115435

English Studies An Introduction to the Discipline(s) Bruce McComiskey, editor Well-known scholars in the field explore the important qualities and functions of English studies’ constituent disciplines—Ellen Barton on linguistics and discourse analysis, Janice Lauer on rhetoric and composition, Katharine Haake on creative writing, Richard Taylor on literature and literary criticism, Amy Elias on critical theory and cultural studies, and Robert Yagelski on English education—and the productive differences and similarities among them that define English studies’ continuing importance. This popular course adoption text provides an invaluable overview of an increasingly fragmented field. 339 pp. | 2006 | College | ISBN 9780814115442 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember

Degree of Change The MA in English Studies Margaret M. Strain and Rebecca C. Potter, editors As the needs of those seeking an MA in English studies have evolved, so too have the degree’s mission and identity. Looking primarily at stand-alone master’s programs, this volume gathers perspectives from faculty, program directors, and students from across the country to examine the design, delivery, and value of a master’s degree in English, challenging the characterization that MA programs in English serve primarily as stepping-stones to the PhD. Rather, contributors reveal how central the MA is to shaping the purpose and identity of contemporary English studies. This collection provides a substantive discussion that goes beyond questioning the state of English studies—it points to curricular, programmatic, and professional innovations that are transforming the field, calling for new dialogue in higher education about the pivotal role of the MA in English. 282 pp. | 2016 | College | ISBN 9780814110799 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814110805

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Studies in Writing & Rhetoric Series The CCCC Studies in Writing & Rhetoric Series supports research exploring how writing and rhetoric are currently and have been historically taught, practiced, and circulated within communities—in colleges, workplaces, or neighborhoods; in local, national, digital, or international contexts. SWR projects represent the diverse identities of teachers, administrators, and researchers involved in writing and rhetoric, addressing the cultural, social, political, and material realities that define their work. SWR is dedicated to the use of digital technologies that ensure its publications are accessible and available to a national and international audience. Series Editor: Steve Parks https://cccc.ncte.org/cccc/swr

Materiality and Writing Studies

NEW

Aligning Labor, Scholarship, and Teaching Holly Hassel and Cassandra Phillips This expansive look at the discipline of writing studies argues for the centering of the field’s research and service on first-year writing, particularly the new majority of college students and those who teach them. Drawing from a study of 78 two-year college student writers and an analysis of nearly two decades of issues of the major journals in the field of writing studies, Hassel and Phillips sketch out a reimagined vision for writing studies that roots the scholarship, research, and service in the discipline squarely within the changing material realities of contemporary college writing instruction. 258 pp. | 2022 | College | ISBN 9780814130841 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814130858

Salt of the Earth Rhetoric, Preservation, and White Supremacy James Chase Sanchez Salt of the Earth is an autoethnography and cultural rhetorics case study that examines white supremacy in the author’s hometown of Grand Saline, Texas, a community long marred by its racist culture. James Chase Sanchez investigates the rhetoric of white supremacy by exploring three unique rhetorical processes—identity construction, storytelling, and silencing—as they relate to an umbrella act: the rhetoric of preservation. Overall, this text argues that (1) we need to better understand the productions of white supremacy as a complex rhetorical act, and (2) in order to create a more well-rounded view of cultural rhetorics as a subfield, we need more analyses of the way cultures of the oppressor survive and thrive. 168 pp. | 2021 | College | ISBN 9780814142233 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814142240 56

OTHER TITLES IN THIS SERIES: Beyond Progress in the Prison Classroom

Options and Opportunities Anna Plemons 185 pp. | 2019 | College ISBN 9780814134658 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814134665

Translanguaging outside the Academy

Negotiating Rhetoric and Healthcare in the Spanish Caribbean Rachel Bloom-Pojar 157 pp. | 2018 | College ISBN 9780814139929 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814139936

Reframing the Relational A Pedagogical Ethic for CrossCurricular Literacy Work Sandra L. Tarabochia

209 pp. | 2017 | College ISBN 9780814139783 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814139790

Genre of Power

Police Report Writers and Readers in the Justice System Leslie Seawright 121 pp. | 2017 | College ISBN 9780814118429 $22.36 member/ $27.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814118436

Inside the Subject

A Theory of Identity for the Study of Writing Raúl Sánchez 127 pp. | 2017 | College ISBN 9780814123454 $22.36 member/$27.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814123478

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Rhetorics of Overcoming Rewriting Narratives of Disability and Accessibility in Writing Studies Allison Harper Hitt

Writing Accomplices with Student Immigrant Rights Organizers Glenn Hutchinson

Rhetorics of Overcoming addresses the in/accessibility of writing classroom and writing center practices for disabled and nondisabled student writers, exploring how rhetorics of overcoming—the idea that disabled students must overcome their disabilities in order to be successful— manifest in writing studies scholarship and practices. Allison Harper Hitt argues that rewriting rhetorics of overcoming as narratives of “coming over” is one way to overcome ableist pedagogical standards. Whereas rhetorics of overcoming rely on medical-model processes of diagnosis, disclosure, cure, and overcoming for individual students, coming over involves the valuing of disability and difference and challenging systemic issues of physical and pedagogical inaccessibility

This book argues for a pedagogical shift in centering the public writing classroom more on students’ work as organizers and rhetoricians. Instead of focusing only on community partnerships, the writing classroom can foreground the work of student organizers and how they can better inform the field’s teaching practices. Each chapter focuses on students’ rhetorical skills through petitions, op-eds, and campaigns to stop deportations. Writing Accomplices with Student Immigrant Rights Organizers emphasizes teachers’ responsibility to act in solidarity with immigrant students, and such work points to a new role for the writing teacher in changing anti-immigrant and white supremacist laws and policies.

160 pp. | 2021 | College | ISBN 9780814141540 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814141557

200 pp. | 2021 | College | ISBN 9780814158500 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814158524

Counterstory The Rhetoric and Writing of Critical Race Theory Aja Y. Martinez

Named one of the 20 Best New Rhetoric Books to Read in 2021 by BookAuthority Humanities scholar Aja Y. Martinez makes a compelling case for counterstory as methodology in rhetoric and writing studies through the well-established framework of critical race theory (CRT), reviewing first the counterstory work of Richard Delgado, Derrick Bell, and Patricia J. Williams, whom she terms counterstory exemplars. Arguing that counterstory provides opportunities for marginalized voices to contribute to conversations about dominant ideology, Martinez applies racial and feminist rhetorical criticism to the rich histories and theories established through counterstory genres, all the while demonstrating how CRT theories and methods can inform teaching, research, and writing/publishing of counterstory. 201 pp. | 2020 | College | ISBN 9780814108789 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814108796

Writing Programs, Veterans Studies, and the Post-9/11 University A Field Guide D. Alexis Hart and Roger Thompson D. Alexis Hart and Roger Thompson offer rich academic inquiry into the idea of “the veteran” as well as into ways that veteran culture has been fostered or challenged in writing classrooms, in writing centers, and in college communities more generally. Presenting a more nuanced approach to understanding “the veteran” leads not only to more useful research, but also to more wide-ranging and significant scholarship and community engagement. Such an approach recognizes veterans as assets to the college campus, encourages institutions to customize their veterans programs and courses, and leads to more thoughtful engagement with veterans in the writing classroom. 178 pp. | 2020 | College | ISBN 9780814175057 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814175064

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Studies in Writing & Rhetoric Series Rhetorics Elsewhere and Otherwise

Black Perspectives in Writing Program Administration

Contested Modernities, Decolonial Visions

From the Margins to the Center

Romeo García and Damián Baca, editors

Staci M. Perryman-Clark and Collin Lamont Craig, editors

This collection explores decolonial shifts in composition and rhetoric informed by strategies for potentially decolonizing language and literacy practices, writing and rhetorical instruction, and research practices and methods. Rhetorics elsewhere and otherwise emerge across a spectrum, from geo- and body politics of knowledge and understanding to local histories emerging from colonial peripheries. 242 pp. | 2019 | College | ISBN 9780814141410 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814141427

“Essential reading for all writing program administrators. Get your copy ASAP!” —Paula Patch, VP, Council of Writing Program Administrators and Senior Lecturer in English, Elon University, Elon, NC

This collection makes a space for WPAs of color to cultivate antiracist responses within an Afrocentric framework and to enact socially responsible approaches to program building. This framework also positions WPAs of color to build relationships with allies and create contexts for students and faculty to imagine rhetorics that speak truth to oppressive and divisive ideologies within and beyond the academy, but especially within writing programs. 167 pp. | 2019 | College | ISBN 9780814103371 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814103388

OTHER TITLES IN THIS SERIES: Assembling Composition

Toward a New Rhetoric of Difference

Kathleen Blake Yancey and Stephen J. McElroy, editors 246 pp. | 2017 | College | ISBN 9780814101988 $30.36 member/$37.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814101995

Stephanie Kerschbaum 2015 CCCC Advancement of Knowledge Award 187 pp. | 2014 | College | ISBN 9780814154953 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814154915

From Boys to Men

On Multimodality

Rhetorics of Emergent American Masculinity Leigh Ann Jones 147 pp. | 2016 | College | ISBN 9780814103753 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814103760

Freedom Writing

African American Civil Rights Literacy Activism, 1955–1967 Rhea Estelle Lathan 143 pp. | 2015 | College | ISBN 9780814117880 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814117897

The Desire for Literacy

New Media in Composition Studies Jonathan Alexander and Jacqueline Rhodes 2015 CCCC Outstanding Book Award 232 pp. | 2014 | College | ISBN 9780814134122 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814134139

Rhetoric of Respect

Recognizing Change at a Community Writing Center Tiffany Rousculp 2016 IWCA Outstanding Book/Major Work Award 200 pp. | 2014 | College | ISBN 9780814141472 $27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember

Writing in the Lives of Adult Learners Lauren Rosenberg

ebook: ISBN 9780814141496

185 pp. | 2015 | College | ISBN 9780814110812

Jay Jordan 165 pp. | 2012 | College | ISBN 9780814139660 $23.96 member/$29.99 nonmember

$27.96 member/$34.99 nonmember ebook: ISBN 9780814110829

Redesigning Composition for Multilingual Realities

ebook: ISBN 9780814139691

58

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Author/Editor Index Akhavan, Nancy 19, 37 Alexander, Jonathan 58 Alfred, Rita Renjitham 6, 35, 37 Alvarez, Steven 13, 32 Applebee, Arthur N. 26 Appleman, Deborah 10 Arola, Kristin L. 27 Baca, Damián 2, 16, 36, 58 Baker-Bell, April 36 Bass, William L. II 12 Bazerman, Charles 26 Beach, Richard 45 Benjamin, Amy 14, 15 Berninger, Virginia W. 26 Best, Stephen 11 Blackburn, Mollie V. 7 Blau, Sheridan 26, 30 Bloom-Pojar, Rachel 56 Boardman, Alison G. 44 Brandt, Deborah 26 Brooks, Maneka Deanna 32 Brown, Alan 45 Bryan, Nathaniel 3, 34 51 Buckley, Eileen Murphy Buehler, Jennifer 12, 17 Buly, Marsha Riddle 33 Burkins, Jan 17, 20 3, 34 Butler, Tamara T. Campano, Gerald 41 29 Carter, James Bucky Chambers, Dianne 4, 54 Chisholm, James S. 30 Christel, Mary T. 48 Christenbury, Leila 53 38 Clark, Shanetia Colantonio-Yurko, Kathleen 2, 16, 36 Coppola, Rick 38 Costanzo, William V. 52 Cox, Michelle 26 Craig, Collin Lamont 58 Crisp, Robert Bryant 5, 52 Crisp, Thomas 43 Crovitz, Darren 15 Crow, John T. 23 Dakin, Mary Ellen 48 Dalton, Bridget 44 Daniels-Lerberg, Trace 40 4, 14, 18, 21 Dean, Deborah DeCourcy, Delia 49 Denstaedt, Linda 11 Devereaux, Michelle D. 15 Dixon, Chris Jennings 24 Donhauser, Meg 54 Dowling, David 46 Downing, David B. 28 Dunning, Stephen 51 Emert, Toby 39 Endo, Rachel 46 Everett, Sakeena 2, 37, 42 Fairchild, Lyn 49 Fecho, Bob 9 Figueiredo, Sergio C. 27 Filkins, Scott 8

Follet, Robin 49 Fox, Dana L. 29, 35 45 Franzen, Joseph Fresch, Mary Jo 43, 50 Fulton, Steve 45 Galin, Jeffrey R. 26 Garcia, Antero 19, 44 García, Romeo 58 Gardner, Roberta Price 43 Gardner, Traci 24 Garey, Judith Freeman 5, 30 Gasiewski, Diana 25 Germán, Lorena 2, 16, 36 Gilliland, Betsy 13, 33 Gilmore, Barry 47 35 Glover, Crystal Polite 43 Goble, Pam Goble, Ryan R. 43 Golden, John 52 2, 16, 36 Gorham, Richard Graham, Hannah 6, 35, 37 Graham, Steve 26 Groenke, Susan L. 44 Gross, Melissa 31 27 Guglielmo, Letizia Harkins, Peggy 43 2, 16, 36 Harris, Patrick Harrison, David L. 50 57 Hart, D. Alexis Hassel, Holly 4, 56 15 Haussamen, Brock Hawks, Lyn Fairchild 5, 49 Hersey, Heather 54 Hicks, Troy 12 57 Hitt, Allison Harper Hochstetler, Sarah 4, 54 31 Hornsby, David Hutchinson, Glenn 57 41 Ianetta, Melissa Illich, Lindsay 50 Jago, Carol 46, 47 Jeffery, Jill V. 26 Jensen, Darin 39 23 Johannessen, Larry R. 3, 34 Johnson, Lamar L. Johnson, Latrise P. 9, 35 Jones, Leigh Ann 58 Jordan, Jay 58 Kahn, Elizabeth A. 4, 23, 44, 54 Kajder, Sara 10 Kaplan, Alexander 47 58 Kerschbaum, Stephanie Kesler, Christie McLean 37 22 Kesler, Ted Kinloch, Valerie 3, 34 Knezek, Suzanne M. 43 Knight, Mary 37 15 Kolln, Martha Laminack, Lester L. 22 Latham, Don 31 Lathan, Rhea Estelle 58 Lattimer, Heather 11, 31 Lewis, Mark A. 10

53 Lindblom, Ken Long, Kevin 48 Lutkewitte, Claire 25 Lynch, Tom Liam 2, 42, 52 44 Macro, Katherine J. Martinez, Aja Y. 36, 57 Matsuda, Paul Kei 26 McCann, Thomas M. 4, 44, 54 McComiskey, Bruce 4, 55 McElroy, Stephen J. 58 Melzer, Dan 24 Miller, Henry “Cody” 39 Miller, Susan K. 28 Milner, Joseph O. 29 Montgomery, Amanda 23 Montgomery, Rob 23 Moon, Brian 31 Murphy, Sandra 26 Nash, Kindel Turner 35 Nemeth, Emily A. 3, 34 Newland, Rebecca 16 Nosek, Christina 17 O’Connor, John S. 51 7 Ochoa, Jennifer Oczkus, Lori 18 Ordoñez-Jasis, Rosario 8 Ortmeier-Hooper, Christina 13, 32 Orzulak, Melinda J. McBee 13, 33 Osorio, Sandra L. 38 Ostergaard, Lori 41 28 Pantoja, Veronica Paugh, Patricia C. 38 Paull, Joanna N. 25 Pella, Shannon 13, 33 Penniman, Bruce M. 54 Perryman-Clark, Staci M. 58 Peters, Brent 45 Petrone, Robert 10 Phillips, Cassandra 4, 56 Pierce, Kathryn Mitchell 8 Player, Grace D. 3, 34 Plemons, Anna 56 Polman, Joseph L. 44 Polson, Bilal 35 Pope, Carol A. 29 Potter, Rebecca C. 55 Powell, Malea 39 Price-Dennis, Detra 2, 19, 42 Proctor, Chris 19 Ray, Katie Wood 22 Rembert, Keisha 2, 16, 36 Rhodes, Jacqueline 58 Rodesiler, Luke 45 Rodríguez, R. Joseph 39 Roen, Duane 28 11 Roop, Laura Jane Rosenberg, Lauren 58 Rousculp, Tiffany 58 Rowe, Deborah Wells 26 Rubenstein, Susanne 18, 23 Sanchez, James Chase 56 Sánchez, Raúl 56

Sanden, Sherry 38 Sarigianides, Sophia Tatiana 10 Scherff, Lisa 44 Schillinger, Trace 11 Schleppegrell, Mary 26 Seawright, Leslie 56 Seglem, Robyn 38 Share, Jeff 45 Shea, Renée H. 46, 47 Shoffner, Melanie 39 29, 35 Short, Kathy G. Sibberson, Franki 12 Simos, Elaine 39 Skillen, Matt 38 Smagorinsky, Peter 19 Smith, Dywanna E. 3, 34 Smith, Melissa Alter 50 Snart, Jason Allen 25 Somers, Albert B. 51 Souto-Manning, Mariana 7 Spinelli, Holly 2, 16, 36 Stafford, William 51 Stephens, Diane 8 Stewart, Melissa 43 Stock, Andrew 11 Stock, Patricia Lambert 11 Stornaiuolo, Amy 41 55 Strain, Margaret M. Stutzman, Cathy 54 Styslinger, Mary E. 29 Sullivan, Patrick M. 26, 30 Swords, Rachel 36 Tarabochia, Sandra L. 56 Thomas, Ebony Elizabeth 41 57 Thompson, Roger 26, 30 Tinberg, Howard Turner, Kristen Hawley 12 Urbanski, Cynthia D. 45 Van Sluys, Katie 9 Vaughn, Kyle 50 Villanueva, Victor 27, 28 Waggoner, Eric 28 Walter, Carolyn Calhoun 23, 44 Walther, Maria 17 Warnock, Scott 25 Webb, Allen 45 Wheeler, Rebecca S. 15, 36 Whitmore, Kathryn F. 30 Whitney, Anne Elrod 6 Wilchek, Deborah L. 46, 47 Wilcox, Kristen Campbell 26 Williams, Carmaletta M. 47 Wilner, Arlene Fish 30 Wilson, Lorraine 31 Winn, Maisha T. 6, 9, 35, 37 Witte, Shelbie 9, 31 Woodard, Rebecca 38 Yancey, Kathleen Blake 58 Yaris, Kim 17, 20 Yates, Kari 17 Yena, Lauren 28 Young, Vershawn Ashanti 36 Zoss, Michelle 44

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Title Index 360 Degrees of Text 51 Adolescent Literacy and the Teaching of Reading 10 Adolescents and Digital Literacies 10 Adventurous Thinking 7 Alice Walker in the Classroom 47 Already Readers and Writers 7 Amy Tan in the Classroom 47 Antibias and Antiracist Teaching (QRG) 2, 16, 36 Assembling Composition 58 Becoming Writers in the Elementary Classroom 9 Beyond Progress in the Prison Classroom 56 Beyond Standardized Truth 8 Beyond “Teaching to the Test” 13, 33 Black Perspectives in Writing Program Administration 58 Bootstraps 28 Bring on the Bard 48 Building Literacy Connections with Graphic Novels 29 Building ELA Classroom Culture through Gaming (QRG) 19 Building the English Classroom 54 Code-Meshing as World English 36 Code-Switching 36 College Composition and Communication 40 College English 41 Community Literacies en Confianza 13, 32 Compose Our World 44 Conferring with Readers (QRG) 17 Connected Reading 12 Continuing the Journey 53 Continuing the Journey 2 53 Continuing the Journey 3 53 CoreEmpathy 37 Counterstory 57 Critical Race English Education 3, 34 Cross-Talk in Comp Theory, 3rd ed. 27 Deep Reading 30 55 Degree of Change Designing Writing Assignments 24 The Desire for Literacy 58 Developing Contemporary Literacies through Sports 45 Digital Reading 12 Discussion Pathways to Literacy Learning 44 Doing and Making Authentic Literacies 11 Empowering Students' Knowledge of Vocabulary 50 Engaging American Novels 29 Engaging Grammar, 2nd ed. 14 Engaging Students with Library of Congress Primary Sources in the ELA Classroom (QRG) 16 English Education 39 English Journal 39 English Language Learners in Literacy Workshops 33 English Leadership Quarterly 39 English Studies 55 English Studies Reimagined 4, 55 11 Entering the Conversations Forum 40 Freedom Writing 58 From Boys to Men 58 Genre of Power 56 Genre Theory 21 Getting the Knack 51 Going Public with Assessment 8 Grammar Alive! 15 Grammar to Get Things Done 15 60

52 Great Films and How to Teach Them The Great Gatsby in the Classroom 46 Growing Writers 6 Immigrant Scholars in Rhetoric, Composition, and Communication 27 The Incarceration of Japanese Americans in the 1940s 46 Inside the Subject 56 In the Pursuit of Justice 7 Judith Ortiz Cofer in the Classroom 46 Just Theory 28 Langston Hughes in the Classroom 47 Language Arts 38 Learning to Write for Readers 23 Lesson Plans for Teaching Writing 24 Letting Go 54 The Lifespan Development of Writing 26 Lightning Paths 50 Linguistic Justice 36 Literacy Engagement through Peritextual Analysis 31 Literacy Instruction for Students Living with Trauma (QRG) 19, 37 Literary Terms 31 Making Curriculum Pop 43 Making Hybrids Work 25 Making Middle School 45 4, 56 Materiality and Writing Studies Mobile Technologies and the Writing Classroom 25 More Grammar to Get Things Done 15 Next Generation Guided Reading (QRG) 20 Next Generation Independent Reading (QRG) 20 Next Generation Read Aloud (QRG) 20 Next Generation Scaffolding & Gradual Release of Responsibility (QRG) 20 Next Generation Shared Reading (QRG) 20 Nikki Giovanni in the Classroom 47 Nonfiction Writers Dig Deep 43 On Multimodality 58 On the Case in the English Language Arts Classroom 4, 54 A Place to Write 23 The Power of Picture Books 43 The Reader Response Notebook 22 Reading and Teaching with Diverse Nonfiction Children’s Books 43 Reading Assessment 8 Reading Challenging Texts 30 Reading for Learning 31 Reading in the Dark 52 Reading in the Reel World 52 48 Reading Shakespeare Film First Reading Shakespeare with Young Adults 48 Real-World Literacies 11 Redesigning Composition for Multilingual Realities 58 Reframing the Relational 56 Research in the Teaching of English 41 Restorative Justice in the English Language Arts Classroom 6, 35, 37 Rethinking Reading in College 30 Rethinking the “Adolescent” in Adolescent Literacy 10 Rhetoric of Respect 58 Rhetorics Elsewhere and Otherwise 58 Rhetorics of Overcoming 57 Salt of the Earth 56 Sandra Cisneros in the Classroom 46 Say Yes to Pears 45 Speak for Yourself 23

Special Issues, Volume 1: Critical Media Literacy 2, 42, 52 Special Issues, Volume 1: Racial Literacy 2, 42 Special Issues, Volume 1: Trauma-Informed Teaching 2, 37, 42 Stories Matter 29, 35 Strategic Writing, 2nd ed. 21 Strategies for Teaching First-Year Composition 28 Sustainable WAC 26 A Symphony of Possibilities 44 Talking Points 38 Teach Living Poets 50 Teaching Children’s Literature: Critical Inquiry to Foster Equity (QRG) 19 Teaching Climate Change to Adolescents 45 Teaching English in the Two-Year College 40 Teaching Grammar in the Secondary Classroom (QRG) 18 Teaching Guided Writing: Scaffolding for Success (QRG) 18 Teaching Julius Caesar 49 Teaching Macbeth 5, 49 Teaching Phonics in Context 31 Teaching Poetry Experiences for Readers and Writers in the K–2 Classroom (QRG) 17 Teaching Poetry in High School 51 Teaching Reading Art Lessons (QRG) 17 Teaching Reading with YA Literature 12 Teaching Reading with YA Literature (QRG) 17 49 Teaching Romeo and Juliet Teaching Secondary Writing (QRG) 18 Teaching Voice in Secondary Writing (QRG) 18 Teaching Writing Online 25 Teaching YA Lit through Differentiated Instruction 44 Theater, Drama, and Reading 5, 30 47 Tim O’Brien in the Classroom 3, 34 Toward a BlackBoyCrit Pedagogy Toward a New Rhetoric of Difference 58 Toward Culturally Sustaining Teaching 35 Transformational Sanctuaries in the Middle Level ELA Classroom 3, 34 Transforming Literacy Education for Long-Term English Learners 32 Translanguaging outside the Academy 56 Understanding Language 13, 33 Unit Design in the ELA Classroom (QRG) 19 Using Film to Unlock Textual Literacy 5, 52 Voices from the Middle 38 What Is “College-Level” Writing? 26 What Is “College-Level” Writing? Vol. 2 26 4, 14 What Works in Grammar Instruction What Works in Writing Instruction, 2nd ed. 21 Where Is the Justice? 3, 34 Wondrous Words 22 Wordplaygrounds 51 Workshopping the Canon 29 Writing about Literature, 2nd ed. 23 Writing Accomplices with Student Immigrant Rights Organizers 57 Writing across Culture and Language 13, 32 Writing Can Change Everything 9 Writing Instruction in the Culturally Relevant Classroom 9, 35 Writing in the Dialogical Classroom 9 Writing Programs, Veterans Studies, and the Post-9/11 University 57 Writing Together 25 The Writing Workshop 22 Zora Neale Hurston in the Classroom 46

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