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“There is a big difference between assigning complex texts and teaching complex texts…” ---Doug, Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Dianne Lapp ….And that’s the crux, isn’t it? That’s why in this brand new edition of the bestselling Text Complexity, the renowned author team provide four new chapters that lay open the instructional routines that take students to new places as readers. No matter what discipline you teach, you will learn how to craft purposeful instruction pitched to your readers’ comprehension capacities, your curriculum’s themes, and your own assessments on what students need next. Doug, Nancy, and Diane provide: • How-to’s for measuring word and sentence length and other countable features of any written work while giving ample consideration to the readers in your room, and how their background knowledge, experiences, and motivations come into play • A rubric for analyzing literary texts for plot structure, point of view, imagery, clarity, and more—and a complexity scalefor analyzing informational texts that describe, inform, and explain • Classroom scenarios of teachers and students engaging with fiction and nonfiction texts that provide enough of a stretch, so you’ll know the difference between a healthy struggle and frustration • The authors’ latest thinking on routines that invite students to interact with complex texts and with one another, including teacher modeling, close reading, scaffolded small group reading, and independent reading It’s time to see text complexity as a dynamic, powerful tool for sliding the right text in front of our students’ at just the right time. Think of this second edition as Text Complexity-2-Go, because it’s all about the movement of minds at work, going deeper than anyone ever thought possible.
Exploring Teacher-Led Tasks : Modeling Expert Thinking
Exploring Teacher-Led Tasks : Modeling Expert Thinking
© Rachel Epstein/PhotoEdit

In selecting texts for classroom use, teachers need to consider more than the quantitative and qualitative scores given to the reading. What students are expected to do with the text should also have an impact on the selection. Simply put, when students are asked to read independently, the selected texts have to be reasonably matched to their performance level. If teachers want students to read more complex texts, they have to teach them how to access these texts. Using high-quality instruction to increase the rigor of what students can read is the goal of teachers everywhere. The pathway for accessing complex texts requires that students encounter texts that are ...
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