If you are an elementary teacher who struggles with struggling readers, Curt Dudley-Marling and Patricia Paugh
provide you with quick, effective answers to your toughest questions. They draw a roadmap that leads you away from
a deficit-based approach toward child-centered practices that give you the time and space to meet every student's
needs.
To achieve in language arts, troubled readers require frequent, explicit, and individualized aid backed by ongoing
assessment, and there's no better structure within which to balance this type of intensive instruction with other
students' needs than the reading workshop. Dudley-Marling and Paugh describe how to focus on the challenges of
struggling readers by setting up a workshop and conducting its minilessons in ways that give you the time and flexibility
needed to provide children with specialized attention. From read-alouds to continuous assessment to differentiated
teaching, the authors' ideas are ready-to-use and proven effective at boosting the reading abilities of developing
readers. Plus A Classroom Teacher's Guide to Struggling Readers has a complete discussion on how to help students
even when you are locked into a basal program.
If you, like tens of thousands of teachers, want a way to teach struggling readers that emphasizes students' capabilities
rather than their deficiencies, read A Classroom Teacher's Guide to Struggling Readers. You'll discover a humane
approach that values all children equally and builds on successes, so that our most challenged readers get all
the attention they need--and deserve.