[Fwd: Re: [NLA] Evidence-based practice in Adult Literacy Edu cation]
AWilder106@aol.com
AWilder106 at aol.com
Thu Apr 11 17:42:18 EDT 2002
Hi Andre,
Let me give a quick reply and see what that does.
1) No, #1 and #2 are different. You can't do #1 without doing #2.
2) If you turned the sentences around they would make another sense:
Viz., Prepare adults to read and write better so as to improve language
communication skills to fully participate in all aspects of family,
education, vocation and community life.
Your task #1 could be describing public speaking.
I am a teacher, and I want to know what to do in the classroom on Monday
morning. I have been on this list for longer than some and shorter than
others, and I have NEVER HEARD DISCUSSED here methodology. Never. OOPs! I
introduced the topic re learning new vocabulary about 3-4 years ago. If I am
running over someone's toes, I apologize. And I do recall some discussion of
EFF, because a kind person from Maine sent me some info, which I don't recall
I ever acknowledged, so here it is.
When I advocate, I want to know what I am advocating for, I want to know if
there are studies out there, I want to know that I am standing on firm
ground, and I want to be able to make recommendations about work that should
be done!
All this discussion of USDOE and types of studies has surfaced this topic.
If people want to say we're a political advocacy list, fine, and I'll take my
concerns away and do work which I know is essential but unacknowledged
because it is outside our agenda (but I obviously don't think it should be).
Tom Sticht gave some very useful specifics about functional reading and
writing, and I went to the relevant web site and got the information. I also
have a library call number for a book he mentions. I am assuming that
administrators use some sort of knowledge base re reading and writing to
direct teachers, volunteers. I assume ngo's also have a method, methods, they
recommend. Or teachers introduce methods which work in their classrooms. And
Catherine King and George Demetrion have been generous with references.
There is discussion about teaching as art, science, experience, which I more
or less buy into given a usual sprinkling of caveats.
When I taught disturbed adolescents I used a variety of assessments all
linked together by what John Strucker calls a component system. (I hope I
have that right, John.) We then built curriculum around those assessments,
building on what the kids wanted to learn about. This is method. I expect
that Tom's assessments, the curriculum, then post testing was very carefully
done--method. I worked with Victoria Purcell-Gates after reading her book
and saw very different methods. She invented then tested a very interesting
method for evaluating how skills generalized. She is a teacher AND a
researcher.
That's about it for now! I hope I'm still on topic, here. Glad you asked
the questions!
Andrea
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