Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4422-3494-9 • Hardback • June 2015 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
978-1-4422-3495-6 • Paperback • June 2015 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
978-1-4422-3496-3 • eBook • June 2015 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
Amy Hutchison is an associate professor at Iowa State University. Her research is focused on approaches to integrating digital technology into literacy instruction and ways to support teachers in their technology integration efforts.
Jamie Colwell is an assistant professor at Old Dominion University. Her research interests include adolescent literacy, pre-service teacher education in literacy, and the uses of technology to promote literacy in K-12 education.
Chapter 1- Digital Technology in the Literacy Classroom
Chapter 2- Planning for Digital Instruction
Chapter 3- Digital Reading In the Classroom
Chapter 4- Using Digital Images in the Classroom
Chapter 5- Using Digital Audio Tools in the Classroom
Chapter 6- Using Digital Graphic Organizer Tools in the Classroom
Chapter 7- Digital Writing
Chapter 8- Reading and Writing Multimodal Text
Chapter 9- Social Media and Collaboration in the Classroom
Chapter 10- The Flipped Classroom
Chapter 11- Managing the Digital Classroom
Chapter 12- Issues Relevant to Using Digital Tools in the K-6 Classroom
Bridging Technology and Literacy blends a focus on teaching and learning with a rich collection of instructional practices for integrating technology. The clear descriptions and a wealth of practical activities and examples put directly into the hands of readers will help to ease the transition into the digital literacy skills so important in today's classrooms. The authors' experiences with both classroom activities and conducting research in the field work together to help teachers visualize and understand the integral connection between reading and writing, whether with print or digital texts. I especially appreciate the attention these authors have given to describing the constraints in the classroom that might put up speed bumps to technology integration. Let's talk about these issues and work through them together, rather than assuming everything will always run smoothly, or the opposite, that nothing will work correctly. Bridging Technology and Literacy arms teachers with the tips of the trade that will support their technology integration.
— Elizabeth Dobler, professor, Elementary Education, Early Childhood, and Special Education, Emporia State University
Bridging Technology and Literacy invites teachers and schools to reconsider the role of digital technology in today’s literacy instruction, explores the complexities of digital literacies, and offers practical examples of how to teach these literacies to young learners. Teachers will find in this book application possibilities for both mobile and traditional technology platforms to engage students in digital reading and writing practices in their classrooms.
— Ewa McGrail, PhD, associate professor of language and literacy, Georgia State University