Courses in Reading
E Rdg 250 Introduction to Literacy
Instruction (3)
This course provides a broad introduction to teaching
reading, writing, speaking, and listening to children and adolescents. The
course will focus on literacy areas such as phonemic awareness, word knowledge,
fluency, comprehension, writing, assessment, literature selection, and
engagement.
E Rdg 404 Literature for Reading
Programs (3)
Examination of the broad range of genres and the rich
variety of materials for use in classroom settings. Focus includes strategies
for incorporating texts into various curricular areas. Topics include literacy
events with text for emergent readers, knowledge of book difficulty, and uses
of literature in the classroom.
E Rdg 406 Young Adult Literature (3)
Examines the broad range of genres and the rich variety of
texts for use in classroom settings. Presents strategies for incorporating
literature into various curricular areas. Topics include motivation issues,
text difficulty, and use of literature with controversial themes.
E Rdg 410 Literacy in Social Contexts
(3)
This course examines historical and contemporary aspects of
literacy, focusing particularly on the relation between literacy and forms of
social and cultural life. Topics include: (1) perspectives on literacy; (2) the
role of literacy in society; (3) implications of diversity on literacy
development; (4) relationships among diverse communities of practice.
E Rdg 487Z Literate Thinking (3)
This class is
designed to strengthen the reading, writing and critical thinking skills of
participants using a variety of challenging texts and rigorous writing
exercises. Beginning with a discussion of folk tales and creation myths, the
class will move through a variety of texts (including short fiction, novels, poetry,
essays, journalism, and film) to examine how �story� addresses and expresses
human experience. Throughout the semester the course examines why humans are
drawn to narrative and why certain topics/themes appear repeatedly in stories
of all cultures and periods. The course will also spend time thinking about the
role of language in thinking and how language serves to limit expression. [WI]