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Literature Circles for Students With Learning Disabilities

Intervention in School and Clinic, 2008
The term literature circle refers to a classroom instructional strategy that connects all aspects of literacy for students with varied interests and levels of reading achievement. Although general education teachers commonly use literature circles, special education teachers have used this strategy much less frequently.
Peggy L. Anderson, LeAnn Corbett
exaly   +2 more sources

Virtual Literature Circles

2023
This study explored how virtual discussion provides a means for discourse between teacher candidates and practitioners from different parts of the United States. Students from three universities in content-area and disciplinary literacy courses focused on texts that explored the impact of illiteracy and literacy and how becoming literate is used for ...
Chyllis E. Scott   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Literature Circles

Remedial and Special Education, 2002
Students in one multiage middle school inclusive classroom engaged in literature circles while reading various short stories and novels during the course of one school semester. The use of literature circles was meant to encourage students to improve their abilities to analyze literature selections as well as their self-determination in selecting ...
H. Timothy Blum   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

“Online Literature Circles Rock!” Organizing Online Literature Circles in a Middle School Classroom

Middle School Journal, 2010
Doing literature circles helps you look at a book in a different way. Last year I didn't care for reading, and I didn't pay attention to the characters, setting, or even bother to finish the books. Reading was boring. The online literature circles motivated me to read all of the books.
Deanna Day, Sally Kroon
openaire   +1 more source

Literature Circles Go Digital

The Reading Teacher, 2014
AbstractThis article describes a literature circle of seven pre‐service teacher education students who read Al Capone Shines My Shoes (G. Choldenko, 2009). Students used the Internet to complete their roles, shared what they learned as they discussed the book, and then wrote about the digital experience.
Karen Bromley   +7 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Literature Circle: Are Literature Circles on Your IEP?

Voices from the Middle, 2005
Daniels outlines the advantages of using Literature Circles with special needs students.
openaire   +1 more source

The Literature Circle: Literature Circles and the Election of 2004

Voices from the Middle, 2004
Daniels highlights flaws in the thinking behind No Child Left Behind and conclusions from the 2000 report from the National Reading Panel, urging teachers to consider stands on education when choosing candidates at the polls this fall.
openaire   +1 more source

Literature Circles in ELT

ELT Journal, 2011
While the intrinsic value of reading extensively for L2 learners has rarely been questioned, practicalities of implementation and the existence of gains beyond lexical enrichment have generated discussion. This article outlines and explores the benefits which Literature Circles (LCs) offer to English language learning and attempts to identify direct ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Literature Circle: The Hunt for Magic

Voices from the Middle, 2006
Daniels offers six pointers for building community in the classroom, which he posits is the single most important task of any effective teacher.
openaire   +1 more source

Literature Circles Go to College

Journal of Basic Writing, 2011
In basic writing classrooms and scholarship, reading too often remains invisible; neither research nor established practice provides tangible activities to support reading and connect it to writing. This article documents a search for structured, scaffolded, low-stakes reading activities, a search that moves off the college campus and into the ...
openaire   +1 more source

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