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Dr Annah Healy lectures in and coordinates the Primary Language and Literacy units in the School of Cultural and Language Studies in Education, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia Her major interests are centred on literacy education and especially critical reading pedagogy. In particular she is concerned with the changes that must occur to reading education as a result of technological advances and text production. She takes a multiliteracies perspective for teaching and learning, and applies social and cultural theories to her work. Dr Healy teaches both postgraduate and undergraduate studies through on-campus, distance and online modes of delivery. She has a vast experience in working with university students, consulting to professional groups, and with university teacher educators. Dr Healy's most recent research projects in reading education include case studies on the changes to eight year old children's reading processes as a result of multimedia and interactive computer-based texts, and a longitudinal research project on readers at risk and their inside and outside classroom textual practices.
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INTRODUCTION
- What is literacy? What is language? How do they differ?
- References
CHAPTER 1: Multiliteracies, models and classroom practice
- The importance of explicit teaching and recognition of what students bring with them to classrooms
- The four literacy roles
- The centrality of meaning to literate practice
- Making literate activity meaningful
- The importance of critical inquiry in literacy education
- Four central themes
CHAPTER 2: Writing and spelling
- A conceptual framework for teaching and learning
Words in context have meaning
An operating model- Language to multiliteracies
Phonological/phonemic awareness
Alphabet awareness
Effective teaching strategies
Grapho-phonic awareness
Effective teaching strategies
Spelling awareness
Spelling and reading involve different sets of skills
Common spelling strategies used by beginning writers
Learning to spell through multi-sensory means
Using visual-auditory-kinaesthetic modalities
The developing speller
Toward independence in spelling
Word origins and vocabulary development- References
CHAPTER 3: Reading
- Considerations for classroom practice
Redefining reading- Print and multimedia interactive texts require different reading processes
Interpretative reading processes
Transformative reading processes- Reading print from a page or screen: Some considerations
- Key concepts for teaching print-based reading (and writing)
Text-related knowledge- Shared/modelled reading (and writing)
Considerations for practice
Prediction and reading
The importance of prediction in reading process
Strategies for assisting the prediction process
Paralanguage cues and reading
Semantic cues in reading
Syntactic cues in reading- Guided reading (and writing)
- Independent reading (and writing)
Concept maps that address stereotyping
A concept map using an advertisement
Developing notions of exposition
Teacher reading to students- References
CHAPTER 4: Reading interactive multimedia
- Reading a multimedia text display
- Reading and aesthetic response
- Nonlinearity and effects on reading process
- Interactivity and reading process
- A cautionary note
- Support factors: Human versus digital machine
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