Jacy Ippolito (EdD, Language and Literacy, Harvard University) is an assistant professor in the Adolescent Education and Leadership Department of the School of Education at Salem State University in Salem, Massachusetts. His recent research and teaching focus on the intersection of adolescent literacy, literacy coaching, teacher leadership, and school reform. He is specifically interested in the roles that teacher leaders, principals, and literacy coaches play in helping institute and maintain instructional change at middle and high school levels. Dr. Ippolito's work has appeared recently in Best Practices of Literacy Leaders, The Elementary School Journal, TheCEDER Yearbook published by the Texas A&M University Corpus Christi's College of Education, the Harvard Educational Review, and the Massachusetts Reading Association's Primer.
Jennifer L. Steele (EdD, Administration, Planning, and Social Policy, Harvard University) is a policy researcher at the RAND Corporation in Washington, DC, where she studies teacher quality, education reform, and data-based decision making in schools. Her recent research includes a study of charter and traditional schools' policies and practices in post-Katrina New Orleans, a multistate study of veterans' access to education benefits on college campuses, a project to develop educational technology usage indicators, and several studies examining the distribution of effective and academically talented teachers. Dr. Steele's work has appeared in such publications as Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, Teachers College Record, and The Future of Children.
Jennifer F. Samson (EdD, Human Development and Psychology, Harvard University) is an assistant professor in the graduate program in learning disabilities at Hunter College, City University of New York. Dr. Samson studies teachers of students at risk for reading difficulties due to disability, language minority status, and low socioeconomic status. Her previous work includes a nationally representative study of disproportionality in special education, longitudinal studies of reading development, and a report on teacher quality for language minority students in the United States. Her research has been published in the Journal of Learning Disabilities, Teaching Exceptional Children, and Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal.
The "Harvard Educational Review" special issue on adolescent
literacy remains one of the most comprehensive treatments of the
topic, and its publication as a book is a most welcome development.
It offers a wide range of perspectives on a topic central to
preparing young people for career, education, and citizenship in
the 21st century. Part of what makes the volume so genuinely
comprehensive and special is its inclusion of topics like writing
and adolescent literacy in out-of-school contexts, as well as the
more traditional topics of disciplinary literacy and cognitive
strategies. "Adolescent Literacy" is an invaluable contribution to
a crucially important field. Gina Biancarosa, assistant professor,
University of Oregon"
This compelling book provides a comprehensive and up-to-date view
of adolescent literacy for multiple audiences: teachers,
administrators and curriculum leaders, teacher educators, and
researchers. It raises awareness of the importance of literacy as a
foundation for learning in all content areas and as a means of
ensuring that all high school graduates are college- and
career-ready. It elaborates on the complex nature of adolescent
literacy, which requires students to read challenging texts, to
reflect with others on their meaning, and to engage in high-level
reading, writing, and thinking. "Adolescent Literacy "provides both
a solid theoretical framework of adolescent literacy and practical
ideas for developing and implementing literacy programs for
adolescent learners. Rita M. Bean, professor emerita, University of
Pittsburgh"
This crucial book brings fresh attention to enduring topics and
themes in adolescent literacy development, expanding our
understanding of the importance of content-area literacy and how
disciplinary ways of thinking connect to student motivation,
language, race, and identity. It offers a multidimensional
introduction to important issues related to improvement of literacy
instruction at the school and district level. Joshua F. Lawrence,
assistant professor, University of California, Irvine"
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