Title | : | Reading Comprehension Research and Testing in the U.S.: Undercurrents of Race, Class, and Power in the Struggle for Meaning |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 080585052X |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780805850529 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 406 |
Publication | : | First published October 24, 2006 |
Reading Comprehension Research and Testing in the U.S. aims to revolutionize how reading comprehension is conceived, theorized, tested, and interpreted for all children. This is a critically relevant volume for educational researchers, teacher educators, school administrators, teachers, policy makers, and all those concerned with school literacy and educational equity.
Reading Comprehension Research and Testing in the U.S.: Undercurrents of Race, Class, and Power in the Struggle for Meaning Reviews
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I absolutely learned from this book. Claims were adjudicated thoroughly, more thorough than I personally required, but well argued and organized. An update of the past ten years - as a short chapter - would be cool.
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So often the history/ies of an academic discipline or field is/are presented as linear, inevitable, apolitical, and unproblematic. Willis refuses this stance, exploring and complicating the history/ies of reading research through the rise and hegemonic reproduction of scientism, positivism, and social Darwinism. She offers various counterhistories to illuminate the racism and classism hiding in plain sight within the evaluation of reading comprehension in the US.
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some of the information was pretty helpful - the history and sequence of some events. and i liked that the author questioned some dominant ideas about reading history. at the same time, the biography stuff is a little bit nutso, and it moves against her ideas of diverse and multiple contexts. she's reproducing the idea of "great men", at the same time that she argues against that idea.