Hardback : £95.98
An acclaimed reference that fills a significant gap in the literature, this volume examines the linkages between spoken and written language development, both typical and atypical. Leading authorities address the impact of specific language-related processes on K-12 literacy learning, with attention to cognitive, neurobiological, sociocultural, and instructional issues. Approaches to achieving optimal learning outcomes with diverse students are reviewed. The volume presents research-based practices for assessing student needs and providing effective instruction in all aspects of literacy: word recognition, reading comprehension, writing, and spelling.
New to This Edition
*Chapters on digital literacy, disciplinary literacy, and integrative research designs.
*Chapters on bilingualism, response to intervention, and English language learners.
*Incorporates nearly a decade's worth of empirical and theoretical advances.
*Numerous prior edition chapters have been completely rewritten.
An acclaimed reference that fills a significant gap in the literature, this volume examines the linkages between spoken and written language development, both typical and atypical. Leading authorities address the impact of specific language-related processes on K-12 literacy learning, with attention to cognitive, neurobiological, sociocultural, and instructional issues. Approaches to achieving optimal learning outcomes with diverse students are reviewed. The volume presents research-based practices for assessing student needs and providing effective instruction in all aspects of literacy: word recognition, reading comprehension, writing, and spelling.
New to This Edition
*Chapters on digital literacy, disciplinary literacy, and integrative research designs.
*Chapters on bilingualism, response to intervention, and English language learners.
*Incorporates nearly a decade's worth of empirical and theoretical advances.
*Numerous prior edition chapters have been completely rewritten.
I. Theoretical and Methodological Issues in the Study of
Language and Literacy Disorders
1. Atypical Language and Literacy Development: Toward an
Integrative Framework, C. Addison Stone and Julie E. Learned
2. Genetics of Language and Literacy Impairments, Jeffrey W.
Gilger
3. Neurobiological Basis of Language and Reading: Typical and
Impaired Processing, Maria Mody and Joanna A. Christodoulou
4. Cognitive Processes Underlying Typical and Atypical
Second-Language and Literacy Development, Kathleen F. Peets
5. In the Service of Questions: From Mixed-Methods to
Question-Based Integrative Designs in Social Research, Elizabeth
Birr Moje
II. The Political and Social Contexts of Language and Literacy
Acquisition
6. Policy and Practice Issues for Students at Risk in Language and
Literacy Learning: Back to the Future, Elaine R. Silliman and
Louise C. Wilkinson
7. Reframing Literacy for a Screen-Based Age: A Case for Digital
Mindsets, Claire Wyatt-Smith and Kay Kimber
8. Becoming Bilingual and Biliterate: Sociolinguistic and
Sociopolitical Considerations, Ofelia García
9. The Case for Increasing Emphasis on Vocabulary Instruction in
the Early Years, Susan B. Neuman and Tanya S. Wright
10. Social and Affective Factors in Children with Language
Impairment: Implications for Literacy Learning, Bonnie Brinton and
Martin Fujiki
11. Fostering Children’s Emergent Literacy Development: The Role of
Family Practices, Christina Yeager Pelatti, Laura M. Justice, Jill
M. Pentimonti, and Mary Beth Schmitt
12. Language Variation and Literacy Learning: The Case of African
American English, Julie A. Washington, Nicole Patton Terry, and
Mark S. Seidenberg
III. Language Processes Underlying Atypical Literacy Learning:
Complementary Perspectives
13. Phonological Processing Deficits and Literacy Learning: Current
Evidence and Future Directions, Gary A. Troia
14. Individual Differences in Word Learning and Reading Ability,
Suzanne M. Adlof and Charles A. Perfetti
15. Morphemes Matter: How Morphological Knowledge Contributes to
Reading and Writing, Joanne F. Carlisle and Amanda P. Goodwin
16. Syntactic Contributions to Literacy Learning, Cheryl M. Scott
and Nicole M. Koonce
17. The Linguistic Challenges of Learning across Academic
Disciplines, Zhihui Fang, Mary J. Schleppegrell, and Jason
Moore
18. Perspective-Taking and Reading Comprehension of Narratives:
Lessons Learned from The Bean, Mavis L. Donahue
19. A Language Perspective on Executive Functioning, Metacognition,
and Self-Regulation in Reading, Carol E. Westby
20. Bilingual Children with Language Learning Disabilities:
Convergence in Conceptual, Linguistic, and Cultural Circles of
Knowledge, María Brea-Spahn
IV. Addressing the Needs of Individuals with Language and Literacy
Challenges
Word Recognition
21. Developmental Variation in Reading Words, Linnea C. Ehri,
Cláudia Cardoso-Martins, and Julia M. Carroll
22. Word Recognition Assessment Frameworks, Froma P. Roth
23. Teaching Students with Reading Disability to Read Words,
Rollanda E. O’Connor and Sean J. Davidson
Reading Comprehension
24. Difficulties with Reading Comprehension, Nell K. Duke, Kelly B.
Cartwright, and Katherine R. Hilden
25. Assessment of Reading Comprehension, Janice M. Keenan
26. The Spoken-Written Comprehension Connection: Constructive
Intervention Strategies, Geraldine P. Wallach, Stephen Charlton,
and Julie Christie Bartholomew
Writing Composition
27. Developmental Variations in the Production of Written Text:
Challenges for Students Who Struggle with Writing, Julie E.
Dockrell
28. Classroom-Based Writing Assessment, Nickola Wolf Nelson
29. Learning and Instruction in Writing, Gert Rijlaarsdam, Tanja
Janssen, Martine Braaksma, Elke Van Steendam, Kris Van den Branden,
Michel Couzijn, and Lieve Verheyden
Spelling
30. Spelling Development and Disability in English, Derrick C.
Bourassa, and Rebecca Treiman
31. Spelling Assessment Frameworks, Julie J. Masterson and Kenn
Apel
32. Spelling: Instructional and Intervention Frameworks, Julie A.
Wolter and Katie Squires
Special Considerations
33. Adolescents Who Struggle and 21st-Century Literacy, Barbara J.
Ehren, B. Keith Ben Hanania Lenz, and Donald D. Deshler
34. Response to Intervention for Teaching and Learning in Language
and Literacy, Karen K. Wixson, Marjorie Y. Lipson, and Sheila W.
Valencia
35. English Language Learners: Instructional Practices to Promote
Literacy Development, Lucinda Soltero-González, Janette K.
Klingner, and Edilberto Cano-Rodríquez
C. Addison Stone, PhD, is Professor Emeritus in the School of
Education at the University of Michigan. He served previously as
Professor and Head of the Learning Disabilities Program in the
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at Northwestern
University. Dr. Stone's research interests center on the social
contexts of typical and atypical language, cognitive, and social
development, with a particular interest in children with learning
disabilities and language disorders.
Elaine R. Silliman, PhD, CCC-SLP, is Professor Emeritus of
Communication Sciences and Disorders and Courtesy Professor of
Psychology at the University of South Florida. She is a Fellow of
the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) and the
International Academy for Research in Learning Disabilities
(IARLD). Dr. Silliman's research focuses on academic language
proficiency in children and adolescents who are struggling with
reading, writing, and spelling, including monolingual
English-speaking children with social dialect variations and
bilingual (Spanish-English) children.
Barbara J. Ehren, EdD, CCC-SLP, is Professor and Chair of
Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of Central
Florida, where she directs the doctoral program that focuses on
language and literacy for learners who struggle. She is a Fellow of
the ASHA and the IARLD, and is a Board Recognized Specialist in
Child Language. Dr. Ehren's research focuses on adolescent
literacy, with a special interest in schoolwide initiatives,
including RTI.
Geraldine P. Wallach, PhD, CCC-SLP, is Professor and the Clinic
Director in the Department of Communicative Disorders at California
State University, Long Beach. An ASHA Fellow, she has received
Outstanding Achievement Awards from the Massachusetts and
California Speech-Language-Hearing Associations. Dr. Wallach has
published and presented widely on language learning
disabilities.
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"This second edition of the Handbook of Language and Literacy is a
timely follow-up to the well-received first edition. The
contributors provide a welcome balance of researchers and
practitioners. The book integrates theoretical and practical issues
in both spoken and written language and their relationships to
literacy learning, including second-language learning. Covering
both typical development and disorders in the same handbook makes
this an ideal text for programs in general and special education;
language sciences; and psychology. My graduate students lit up with
enthusiasm when I shared this volume with them."--Virginia W.
Berninger, PhD, Department of Educational Psychology, University of
Washington "A rerun is rarely better than the first run, but the
second edition of the Handbook of Language and Literacy surpasses a
very good first showing by a country mile. I appreciate the
comprehensive coverage provided by the contributing authors,
especially their attention to new topics such as digital literacy,
RTI, interdisciplinary literacy, and ELL instruction."--Steve
Graham, EdD, Warner Professor, Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College,
Arizona State University
"The volume provides an exceptionally broad and thorough review of
current research concerning the theoretical, methodological, and
service delivery issues involved in treating individuals with
language and literacy challenges. The impressive group of
contributors represents the wide range of disciplines with interest
in these individuals. The editors have produced a seminal reference
that will be indispensable for professionals in the field."--Alan
Kamhi, PhD, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders,
University of North Carolina at Greensboro
"A state-of-the-art resource for educators who recognize the power
and potential of an interdisciplinary approach to language
development and literacy learning, this handbook has been a trusted
source since its original publication. Cutting-edge topics in the
second edition include digital literacy, disciplinary literacy,
RTI, and second-language acquisition, all carefully contextualized
for 21st-century educators and learners. This is an important text
for graduate-level education courses and a 'must' for the
preparation of reading specialists, reading teachers, and literacy
coaches. Understanding the critical relationship between language
and literacy is the only path to effective reading instruction and
intervention."--Barbara A. Marinak, PhD, School of Education and
Human Services, Mount St. Mary's University -This handbook provides
an extensive resource in all aspects of typical and atypical
literacy development....Practitioners, researchers, and students in
the fields of language science and disorders, literacy,
speech/n-/language pathology, special education, and educational
psychology especially will benefit from the comprehensive
examination of how language-related processes integrate with
literacy instruction....Covers all aspects of literacy....It would
be of great value to college and university departments and
reference sections. (on the first edition)--Education Libraries,
12/1/2004ƒƒChallenges the literacy community to rethink the meaning
of difference, particularly as it relates to students' language and
literacy acquisition in U.S. public schools....Provides insights
into the politics of difference [and] helps us to recast our vision
of effective instruction for atypical language and literacy
learners....The Handbook has important messages for literacy
teacher educators. (on the first edition)--Reading Research
Quarterly, 4/1/2006
"This second edition of the Handbook of Language and Literacy is a
timely follow-up to the well-received first edition. The
contributors provide a welcome balance of researchers and
practitioners. The book integrates theoretical and practical issues
in both spoken and written language and their relationships to
literacy learning, including second-language learning. Covering
both typical development and disorders in the same handbook makes
this an ideal text for programs in general and special education;
language sciences; and psychology. My graduate students lit up with
enthusiasm when I shared this volume with them."--Virginia W.
Berninger, PhD, Department of Educational Psychology, University of
Washington "A rerun is rarely better than the first run, but the
second edition of the Handbook of Language and Literacy surpasses a
very good first showing by a country mile. I appreciate the
comprehensive coverage provided by the contributing authors,
especially their attention to new topics such as digital literacy,
RTI, interdisciplinary literacy, and ELL instruction."--Steve
Graham, EdD, Warner Professor, Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College,
Arizona State University
"The volume provides an exceptionally broad and thorough review of
current research concerning the theoretical, methodological, and
service delivery issues involved in treating individuals with
language and literacy challenges. The impressive group of
contributors represents the wide range of disciplines with interest
in these individuals. The editors have produced a seminal reference
that will be indispensable for professionals in the field."--Alan
Kamhi, PhD, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders,
University of North Carolina at Greensboro
"A state-of-the-art resource for educators who recognize the power
and potential of an interdisciplinary approach to language
development and literacy learning, this handbook has been a trusted
source since its original publication. Cutting-edge topics in the
second edition include digital literacy, disciplinary literacy,
RTI, and second-language acquisition, all carefully contextualized
for 21st-century educators and learners. This is an important text
for graduate-level education courses and a 'must' for the
preparation of reading specialists, reading teachers, and literacy
coaches. Understanding the critical relationship between language
and literacy is the only path to effective reading instruction and
intervention."--Barbara A. Marinak, PhD, School of Education and
Human Services, Mount St. Mary's University - This handbook
provides an extensive resource in all aspects of typical and
atypical literacy development....Practitioners, researchers, and
students in the fields of language science and disorders, literacy,
speech/n-/language pathology, special education, and educational
psychology especially will benefit from the comprehensive
examination of how language-related processes integrate with
literacy instruction....Covers all aspects of literacy....It would
be of great value to college and university departments and
reference sections. (on the first edition)--Education Libraries,
12/1/2004Æ’Æ’ Challenges the literacy community to rethink the
meaning of difference, particularly as it relates to students'
language and literacy acquisition in U.S. public
schools....Provides insights into the politics of difference [and]
helps us to recast our vision of effective instruction for atypical
language and literacy learners....The Handbook has important
messages for literacy teacher educators. (on the first
edition)--Reading Research Quarterly, 4/1/2006
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