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Authors Irene Fountas and Gay Su Pinnell have already
helped hundreds of thousands of K-3 teachers engage, inform, and inspire early
readers and writers. Now, with Guiding Readers and Writers (Grades 3-6), Fountas
and Pinnell support teachers on the next leg of the literacy journey, addressing
the unique challenges of teaching upper elementary students.
The product of many years of work with classroom
teachers, Guiding Readers and Writers (Grades 3-6) is one of the most
comprehensive, authoritative guides available today. It explores all the
essential components of a quality literacy program in six separate sections:
- Breakthrough to Literacy: Fountas and Pinnell
present the basic structure of the language/literacy program within a
breakthrough framework that encompasses the building of community through
language, word study, reading, writing, and the visual arts. The framework
plays out as three "blocks," which can be interpreted as conceptual units as
well as segments of time within the school day. Specific information on how
to structure a reading and writing workshop is provided. A practical chapter
on organizing and managing the classroom will help you implement the
principles in your own classroom.
- Independent Reading: It is essential for
students to develop interests and tastes as readers, selecting books for
themselves every day. Fountas and Pinnell devote four chapters to
independent reading, exploring how to structure teaching, minilessons,
conferences, groupshare, and ways to use response journals as part of a
reading workshop.
- Guided Reading: The chapters in this section
provide detailed information on planning for guided reading, dynamic
grouping for effective teaching, and selecting, introducing, and using
leveled texts. Fountas and Pinnell describe characteristics of texts related
to difficulty and ways to organize texts in your classroom and school.
- Literature Study: This section of the book
discusses how to make students’ experiences with literature as rich as
possible. The authors offer specific suggestions for forming groups, guiding
student choices, and establishing and teaching routines for literature
discussion. A full chapter explores reader response and ways to help readers
dig deep to uncover the meaning of texts.
- Teaching for Comprehension and Word Analysis: This
detailed look at the reading process explores both oral and silent reading,
processes and behaviors related to comprehension, and ways to help students
construct meaning. Included are twelve systems for sustaining the reading
process and expanding meaning, plus discussions of the important areas of
phonics, spelling, and vocabulary.
- The Reading and Writing Connection: These
chapters showcase the instructional contexts—poetry, writer’s notebooks,
writer’s talks, genre, content literacy, and student research—that support
students in connected reading and writing. An informative overview of the
characteristics of fiction and nonfiction will help you teach students to
read and write a variety of genre. What’s more, the authors suggest ways to
help students learn the "genre" of testing and perform the kinds of reading
and writing tasks that tests require. They also detail the continuous
thoughtful assessment that guides all aspects of effective teaching.