Ages 4-16
Choice Words: How Language Affects Children’s Learning
Peter Johnston
Foreword by Richard Allington
In productive classrooms, teachers don't just teach children skills: they build emotionally and relationally healthy learning communities. Teachers create intellectual environments that produce not only technically competent pupils, but also caring, secure, actively literate human beings.
Choice Words shows how teachers accomplish this using their most powerful teaching tool: language. Throughout, Peter Johnston provides examples of apparently ordinary words, phrases, and uses of language that are pivotal in the orchestration of the classroom. Grounded in a study by accomplished literacy teachers, the book demonstrates how the things we say (and don't say) have surprising consequences for what children learn and for who they become as literate people. Through language, children learn how to become strategic thinkers, not merely learning the literacy strategies. In addition, Johnston examines the complex learning that teachers produce in classrooms that is hard to name and thus is not recognised by tests, by policy-makers, by the general public, and often by teachers themselves, yet is vitally important.
This book will be enlightening for any teacher who would like to be more conscious of the many ways their language helps children acquire literacy skills and view the world, their peers, and themselves in new ways.
Contents
The Language of Influence in Teaching; Noticing and Naming; Identity; Agency and Becoming Strategic; Flexibility and Transfer (or Generalization); Knowing; An Evolutionary, Democratic Learning Community; Who Do You Think You're Talking To?; Appendixes; References
2004 120pp paperback
978-1-57110-389-5
£19.99
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