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NCTE Consulting Network

Consultants and Services on Content Area Literacy - Previous Revision

NCTE offers consultants and services on content area literacy instruction that when used together, provide extended learning opportunities for teachers and makes a positive impact on learning.  These opportunities include the Pathways ProgramWeb SeminarsResource Kits and books for study groups.

Consultants are available to present one-day or multi-day presentations or provide year-round consulting.  All workshops and presentations can be customized to meet your specific needs.     

To Request NCTE Professional Development Services, complete
the Online Request Form, call 800-369-6283 or email us today! 

 

Consultants

Peggy Albers: K-16, reading instruction, critical literacy, art and literacy 
Amy Benjamin: 6-12, reading and writing instruction
Beverly Ann Chin: K-16, multicultural literature
Pamela Childers: 9-12, writing center development
Douglas Fisher: K-12, building framework for literacy, gradual release of responsibility
Nancy Frey: K-12, building framework for literacy, assessment, gradual release of responsibility

Maria Grant: 6-12, assessment, literacy coaching

Heather Lattimer: 6-12, reading and writing in the content areas
Katherine McKnight: 6-12, reading/writing instruction, meeting the needs of underserved population

Kathryn Mitchell Pierce: 6-8, writing

Ingrid Wendt:  K-12, writing, ELL, poetry

David and Phyllis Whitin: K-8, math is language too, integrating learning in action
Jeffrey Wilhelm: K-16, reading comprehension, inquiry curriculum, gender literacy

Sample Workshops

Content Area Literacy: Reading for Meaning (Grades 3-12)
Consultant:  Peggy Albers
In this single or multiple-day workshop, teachers will understand how the reading process works, and how learners make sense of content materials. Teachers will learn the significance of understanding text structures within content materials and reader stances, and how to use these structures and stances to support students’ writing.

Content Literacy Strategies that Work
Consultants:  Douglas Fisher or Nancy Frey
Audience:  content teachers in middle and high school, administrators
At the end of this session, participants will be able to understand the use and advantages of content literacy strategies, describe a decision-making process for identifying and implementing a school-wide literacy approach, identify the components of a professional development plan to foster teacher proficiency and collegial coaching, link schoolwide approaches to a systematic accountability design, complete a planning tool for establishing and implementing a school-wide literacy program for their school site.

The Writing Project Model as Applied to Poetry

Consultant:  Ingrid Wendt
Audiences:   Elementary, Middle, and Secondary Teachers and Students

Applying the mainstays of the Writing Project – brainstorming, prewriting, writing, and editing – to poetry, Ingrid Wendt leads participants in hands-on activities based on her teaching guide Starting with Little Things.   At the end of the session, participants will come away with theories and ideas for implementing sequential plans for a unit on reading and writing poetry, or, better yet, making poetry reading and writing something that happens all year long.

 

Content Area Literacy Strategies
Consultant:  Katherine McKnight       Grade Level: 6-12
This workshop will explore the theory and practice involved in teaching content reading at the middle and secondary school level.  It focuses on the literacy processes, which involves listening, speaking, reading, and writing.  In addition, building on general knowledge of teaching literacy in middle and secondary schools, this workshop provides exploration of the methods of teaching reading and writing within the content areas. Through the exploration of current research in the field of adolescent literacy, participants will develop their knowledge of instructional methods associated with increasing comprehension for students in secondary schools. 

Integrated Learning in Action
Consultants:  David and Phyllis Whitin
Wondering how to integrate science, social studies, mathematics and language?  This session addresses the conditions that support integrated learning from an inquiry perspective, with particular emphasis on reading, writing, and representing one’s thinking.  It focuses on helping children to ask critical questions about information texts, especially numerical information. 

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Related Resources
Adolescent Literacy Pathways
Learn More Today!
Related Books
Learning to Read the Numbers
Reading for Learning
New Visions for Linking Literature and Mathematics
Math is Language Too

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