A state-of-the-art compendium of resource materials and current practice that answers two basic questions: What is literacy? and How do individuals become literate?
Not long ago, literacy simply meant knowing how to read and write. Today, the study of literacy is a complex field encompassing many different areas, from computer literacy to geographic literacy, and including several degrees of competence such as functional, pragmatic, and cultured. In addition there are six kinds of readers: the submissive, the active, the semiotic, the subjective, the psychoanalytic, and the interpretive community reader, and at least two distinct ways of reading: aesthetic reading and rational reading.
In this comprehensive, accessible volume, two literacy experts not only help readers understand the latest theories and the heated controversies in this exciting field, they also show readers how this vast new knowledge is being applied in successful literacy programs.
- Detailed discussion of reader response theory and the different types of readers
- Contact information for a variety of literacy organizations along with a list of websites offering lesson plans, teaching resources, and literacy research
Brett Elizabeth Blake is associate professor in the School of Education at St. John's University, New York, NY.
Robert W. Blake is professor emeritus of education and human development and English education at SUNY College, Brockport, Brockport, NY.
Title: Literacy and Learning: A Reference Handbook (Contemporary Education Issues)
Author: Blake, Brett Elizabeth
ISBN: 9781576072738
Binding:
Publisher: ABC-CLIO
Publication Date: 2002-11-15
Number of Pages: 267
Weight: 0.5263 kg
This intriguing exploration of many facets of literacy is divided into 11 chapters that discuss the meaning of literacy . . . this work should be placed in the stacks . . . This work is recommended for most libraries, but especially those supporting programs in education, psychology, and philosophy. - American Reference Books Annual