
For The Love Of Literacy
For the Love of Literacy provides podcasts about the exciting advances in literacy instruction, from morphology and orthography (the spelling system), to meaningful sight word memorization, and sentence construction and comprehension. We focus on the often overlooked aspects of literacy and their links to language development.
We tie learning to read, spell and writing to their roots in spoken language. This makes teaching and learning these abilities much easier because literacy learning is driven by language learning. The major components of spoken language plus vocabulary knowledge strongly predicting and largely determining growth in reading, spelling and writing.
Our guests are not just knowledgeable the links between language and language but know how to implement this learning in the classroom.
You will hear from noted researchers including Linnea Ehri, Marcia Henry and Peter Bowers as well as teachers who have developed lessons that engage students and enrich language abilities. Check back weekly to discover more Fulfilling Literacy Lessons and Clarifying conversations. Feel free to reach out to me at Bruce@ReadingShift.com.
For The Love Of Literacy
Marcia Henry and Deb Glaser - Learning to Love Language - From Words to Meaningful Sentences
Learn how educators can enrich lessons and develop a deep appreciation for written and spoken language for students in all grades. Learn that spelling, morphology, vocabulary development and sentence writing can be taught, not as separate subjects, but in a time-saving integrated manner. If you are looking to connect word meaning and sentence comprehension to decoding instruction then this is the podcast for you.
Dr. Marcia Henry brings six decades of experience working in the fields of literacy and dyslexia. She writes for a variety of professional journals and serves on the editorial boards of Dyslexia and Annals of Dyslexia, the journals of the British Dyslexia Association, and the International Dyslexia Association. She has been a distinguished professor, researcher, and interventionist. Her books for teachers include: Unlocking literacy: Effective decoding and spelling instruction, Morphemes matter: A framework for instruction, WORDS: Integrated decoding and spelling instruction based on word origin and word structure and Patterns for success in reading and spelling (2nd Ed.).
Dr. Deb Glaser is an educational consultant, author, and professional development provider with expertise in reading assessment and proven instructional methods. She was a classroom and learning disability instructor and a director of a non-profit dyslexia learning center where she developed programs to teach both teachers and students. Her books include Morpheme magic: Lessons to build morphological awareness for grades 4-12 and Morphemes for little ones: Bringing the magic of language into K-3 classrooms.
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Henry, M.K. (2011). A short history of the English language (4th Ed.). In J. Birsh & S. Carreker (Eds.), Multisensory structured language instruction: Theory and practice (pp. 93-112). Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes Publishing.
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Apel, K., Wilson-Fowler, E.B., Brimo, D., & Perrin, N.A. (2012). Metalinguistic
Contributions to reading and spelling in second and third grade students. Reading and Writing, 25, 1283-1305.
Bowers, P.N., Kirby, J.R., Deacon, S.H. (2010). The effects of morphological
instruction on literacy skills: A synthesis of the literature. Review of Educational
Research, 80, 144-179.
Ehri, L.C. & Snowling, M. (2004). Developmental variation in word recognition. In A.C.
Stone, E.R. Silliman, B.J. Ehren, & K.Apel (Eds.) Handbook of language and literacy:
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