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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: B.H. James , Elizabeth JamesPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.50cm Weight: 0.304kg ISBN: 9781475825381ISBN 10: 1475825382 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 11 March 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsAs we know, it's up to our high schools and the English teachers in them to figure out how to develop the critical thinking and deeper learning promised by the new set of English language arts skills that most states have adopted. Method to the Madness provides details for high school English teachers in any high school on the rigorous reading and literature curriculum the authors worked out for credit recovery classes in a California magnet high school, as well as the discussion questions and essay-writing activities they used to engage their students and develop their college readiness skills. What are some of the complex literary and non-literary texts English teachers can use for students like those in the James's cred recovery classes? Read Method to the Madness and find out what worked for these authors. -- Dr. Sandra Stotsky, professor emerita, University of Arkansas There are three tests for any book designed to help teachers be better teachers: first and foremost is how carefully it maintains a focus on the students' experience in the room; second, how well it lays out practical solutions to the ever-present challenge of keeping the teachers' workloads manageable; and finally, how well it can defend itself to the current education standards. Elizabeth and Bill James' book Method to the Madness: A Common Core Guide to Creating Critical Thinkers through the Study of Literature passes all these tests, and even rocks the bonus question: How can we get our students to read and understand challenging literature? This is, in the end, an excellent textbook about teaching kids to think. -- Karen Gettert Shoemaker, PhD, author of The Meaning of Names As we know, it's up to our high schools and the English teachers in them to figure out how to develop the critical thinking and deeper learning promised by the new set of English language arts skills that most states have adopted. Method to the Madness provides details for high school English teachers in any high school on the rigorous reading and literature curriculum the authors worked out for credit recovery classes in a California magnet high school, as well as the discussion questions and essay-writing activities they used to engage their students and develop their college readiness skills. What are some of the complex literary and non-literary texts English teachers can use for students like those in the James's cred recovery classes? Read Method to the Madness and find out what worked for these authors. -- Dr. Sandra Stotsky, professor emerita, University of Arkansas There are three tests for any book designed to help teachers be better teachers: first and foremost is how carefully it maintains a focus on the students' experience in the room; second, how well it lays out practical solutions to the ever-present challenge of keeping the teachers' workloads manageable; and finally, how well it can defend itself to the current education standards. Elizabeth and Bill James' book Method to the Madness: A Common Core Guide to Creating Critical Thinkers through the Study of Literature passes all these tests, and even rocks the bonus question: How can we get our students to read and understand challenging literature? This is, in the end, an excellent textbook about teaching kids to think. -- Karen Gettert Shoemaker, PhD, author of The Meaning of Names As we know, it's up to our high schools and the English teachers in them to figure out how to develop the critical thinking and deeper learning promised by the new set of English language arts skills that most states have adopted. Method to the Madness provides details for high school English teachers in any high school on the rigorous reading and literature curriculum the authors worked out for credit recovery classes in a California magnet high school, as well as the discussion questions and essay-writing activities they used to engage their students and develop their college readiness skills. What are some of the complex literary and non-literary texts English teachers can use for students like those in the James's cred recovery classes? Read Method to the Madness and find out what worked for these authors. -- Dr. Sandra Stotsky, professor emerita, University of Arkansas Author InformationB.H. James is the author of Parnucklian for Chocolate, a finalist for the 2014 PEN Center USA Literary Award in Fiction. He has spent the last ten years teaching English to sixth through twelfth graders at a title I school in California. Elizabeth James has spent the last eight years teaching English to all ability levels. She spent the last four years as coordinator for the prestigious International Baccalaureate program at her title I school site. She and B.H. have two amazing sons. Visit methodtothemadnesscommoncore.wordpress.com Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |