ABSTRACT

Designed to facilitate teachers’ efforts to meet the actual challenges and dilemmas they face in their classrooms, Becoming a Teacher Researcher in Literacy Teaching and Learning:

  • provides background information and key concepts in teacher research
  • covers the "how-to" strategies of the teacher research process from the initial proposal to writing up the report as publishable or presentable work
  • illustrates a range of literacy topics and grade levels
  • features twelve reports by teacher researchers who have gone through the process, and their candid remarks about how activities helped (or not)
  • helps teachers understand how knowledge is constructed socially in their classrooms so that they can create instructional communities that promote all students’ learning.

Addressing the importance of teacher research for better instruction, reform, and political action, this text emphasizes strategies teachers can use to support and strengthen their voices as they dialogue with others in the educational community, so that their ideas and perspectives may have an impact on educational practice both locally in their schools and districts and more broadly.

part |2 pages

Part One Defining, Planning, and Starting Your Teacher Research

part |2 pages

Part Two Enacting, Analyzing, and Writing Up Your Inquiry

chapter 5|9 pages

Strategies for Data Collection

chapter 6|15 pages

Analysis: What Do the Data Mean?

part |2 pages

Part Three Teacher Researcher Reports

chapter 10|1 pages

Kristen Terstriep’s Inquiry Paper

chapter |15 pages

Using Writing Workshop to Guide Revision

chapter |9 pages

Coaching as a Collaborative Process