About the Author:
Richard Beach is professor emeritus of English education at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. Beach was also president of the Literacy Research Association from 2012 to 2013, and has co-authored numerous titles on literacy including Using Apps for Learning Across the Curriculum (2014) and Teaching to Exceed the English Language Arts Common Core State Standards (2012).
Chris Anson is University Distinguished Professor and director of the Campus Writing and Speaking Program in the department of English at North Carolina State University. Anson is also chair of the Conference on College Composition and Communication, as well as the co-author of The Longman Handbook for Writers and Readers, 6th ed. (2011) and the editor of 75 Readings Across the Curriculum: An Anthology (2006).
Lee-Ann Breuch is associate professor in the department of Writing Studies, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, and the author of Virtual Peer Review: Teaching and Learning about Writing in Online Environments (2004).
Thomas Reynolds is associate professor, in the department of Writing Studies, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, and has written journal articles and book chapters on student writers and their work.
Review:
This book promotes authentic reading and writing opportunities through use of digital tools—e.g., blogs, wikis, websites, annotations, Twitter, mapping, and forum discussions—that can be easily adapted for any secondary and college classroom activity. The text provides excellent links among the theoretical reasons underpinning technology’s use in the classroom, research-based supports of technology’s coursework relevance, and the practical implications for adopting technology—mainly online applications and programs—into individual lessons and throughout units. New educators or those leery of entering the digital education maelstrom will find helpful suggestions and models to aid them through the transition. Educators who consider themselves digital natives will find refreshing new perspectives and perhaps even new digital tools to enrich their teaching. . . .Summing Up: Recommended. Faculty, professionals, and practitioners. (CHOICE)
An important book! Educators will find Understanding and Creating Digital Texts a valuable tool: The authors provide extensive explanations of digital activities, which expand the learning environment through the use of a variety of digital tools. In using these activities, students increase their ability to navigate the internet as they develop real world reading and writing skills. (Carol Wickstrom, University of North Texas; director of the North Star of Texas Writing Project)
Understanding and Creating Digital Texts helps educators intentionally connect digital reading and writing tools with real-world literacy practices. It lays out both the whys and hows of designing inquiry-based learning spaces that encourage students to use digital tools and purposeful literacy practices to collaboratively weave their own perspectives and identities into co-constructed understandings of texts created by others. Each chapter also links suggested activities to relevant research, Common Core State Standards, digital tool sets, assessment ideas, and teachers’ stories of how digital literacy practices play out in real classrooms. (Julie Coiro, University of Rhode Island)
This is a valuable resource for every teacher’s bookshelf! Offering expert advice and compelling examples, Beach and company provide insights into effective pedagogical practices, as well as a wealth of tools to engage students in digital reading and writing. In addition, Understanding and Creating Digital Texts: An Activity-Based Approach provides connections related to the Common Core State Standards and a compendium of materials in an online repository. (Kristine E. Pytash, Kent State University)
This book is as comprehensive as it is inspirational! By introducing engaging activities and classroom examples, the authors brilliantly demonstrate how digital tools can be used to enhance literacy instruction and transform teaching and learning. The framework advanced for both accessing online information and constructing digital texts lends supportive guidance in planning and assessment of important digital literacy skills. Understanding and Creating Digital Texts is a must read for pre-service and in-service teachers alike. (Jill Castek, Portland State University)
Understanding and Creating Digital Texts: An Activity-Based Approach provides readers with activities and classroom examples for using a range of different digital tools to engage students in understanding and creating digital texts. It integrates reading and writing of digital texts through goal-driven activities designed to help students define specific purposes and audiences for reading and writing, make connections between texts, collaborate with others, employ multimodal communication, adopt alternative perspectives, and construct identities.
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