For young children with moderate to severe disabilities, developing literacy skills can lead to more active and fulfilling membership in society. This motivating, forward-thinking book will help educators see all their students as literate and use an innovative social model of literacy to enrich the skills of children with and without disabilities. Relating in-depth stories from hundreds of hours spent observing inclusive preschool classrooms, literacy researcher Christopher Kliewer inspires readers to
view literacy as more than direct interaction with alphabetic text
use dynamic, imaginative methods dramatic play, drawing, painting, dance, movement to help students with disabilities acquire useful literacy skills
encourage students with and without disabilities to collaborate on literacy-building activities throughout the day
incorporate the interests, imaginations, and histories of students with disabilities in classroom routines and lessons Special and general educators will discover how this bold new vision of literacy and inclusion will benefit all their students, and they'll use the vivid examples as models in their own classrooms. A passionate, carefully researched call to action, this eye-opening book will help educators move beyond the labels and expectations often associated with disability, presume competence instead of limitation, and ensure that students with significant disabilities reach their full potential as literate citizens. |
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