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Home > Books & Video > Browse by Topic > Assessment > Knowing Literacy

Knowing Literacy

Constructive Literacy Assessment

Knowing Literacy

Peter H. Johnston
Year: 1997

Media: 368 pp/paper + 40-minute CD
ISBN: 978-157110-008-5
Grade Range: K-3

Item No.: WSB-0008

Price: $36.00
Flat-rate shipping $5.00


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Table of Contents | About the Author(s) | Reviews

American children are the most tested in the world, and the poor and the less competent are the most tested of all. We keep trying to improve literacy learning by developing new tests with better technical characteristics. But, as we shall see, all of this testing has had, if anything, the opposite effect. Our error has been in approaching the matter as if it were merely a technical problem—as if it were possible, even desirable, to exclude human judgment and values from the assessment process, and as if it were reasonable to treat children as psychological objects. Assessment is a profoundly human, social phenomenon, thoroughly value-laden, and it cannot be otherwise. And in order to draw valid conclusions about a child's learning, a teacher must understand how learning takes place. The very complexity of this is in knowing the available assessment options and understanding their consequences.

In Knowing LiteracyPeter Johnston sets forth the theoretical basis for today's assessment practices in the context of contemporary literacy learning theory. This comprehensive text will equip teachers with the knowledge and techniques to assess in ways that help their students develop a more thoughtful literacy.

Part One describes the social and educational basis of literacy assessment, and develops an understanding of the knowledge required for accurate assessment, including the connections between a teacher's assessment practices and students' self-assessments.

Part Two explores the personal, social, and intellectual nature of literacy and its development-what characteristics to notice and document and what they mean.

Part Three illustrates methods of documenting that development in ways that will contribute to the growth of a democratic literacy. These chapters offer examples of checklists, report cards, portfolios, and observation forms, and discuss their possibilities and implications. Two chapters, co-authored with Marie Clay, are accompanied by a CD of children reading. These chapters and the tape show you step-by-step how to make and interpret running records of children's oral reading.

Part Four is intended to change the ways we talk about children's literacy development. It provides ways to engage various members of the school community in productive conversations about literate teaching and learning.

The final chapter helps us understand how to keep track of literate development without losing our way and forgetting the point of literacy learning.

Table of Contents

Contents
Introduction
Part One Basic Issues
1. Starting the Conversation
2. Being a Constructive Evaluator
3. It Takes Two: Evaluation as Social Interaction
4. Sane Self-Assessment
5. Shaping the Reflective Lens
6. What Makes Literate Activity Easy or Difficult?
7. Controlling the Ease of Literate Activities
8. Choosing and Erring
Part Two Noticing Details
9. Meaningful Literacy
10. Constructive Literacy
11. Concepts of Being Literate
12. Concepts About Print
13. The Sound, the Look, and the Feel of Words
14. Being Strategic
15. Children's Concepts of Competence and Success
16. Under Construction: The Patterns of Development
Part Three Documenting and Keeping Track
17. Opening Conversations
18. Conversations in Print
19. Interviews and Conferences
20. Learning from Listening
21. Recording Oral Reading Co-authored with Marie M. Clay
22. Interpreting Oral Reading Records Co-authored with Marie M. Clay
23. Telling Thinking: Evaluation Through Thinking Out Loud
24. Questioning, Cloze, Retelling, and Translating
25. Observation Records and Checklists
Part Four Talking About Children's Literacy Development
26. Beginning Portfolios
27. Talking About Portfolios
28. Writing Case Studies
29. Opening Pandora's Grade Box
30. Synchronizing Our Conversations: Moderation in Assessment
31. Keeping Track Without Losing Our Way
Appendixes
References
Index

About the Author(s)

Peter Johnston grew up and taught elementary school in New Zealand before coming to the United States to earn his Ph.D. at the Center for the Study of Reading at the University of Illinois.
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Reviews

Language Arts - January 1998
"Peter Johnston's work clearly and consistently demonstrates his commitment to constructivism and democratic values. Johnston offers commendable challenges and practical suggestion for changes in traditional school practice." Language Arts, 1998

Voices from the Middle - November 1997
"Declaring assessment as a 'profoundly human, social phenomenon, thoroughly value-laden,' this reader-friendly text invites us to seek out alternate and better ways to evaluate students. . . This book is a must." Voices from the Middle, 1997

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