Educator
Portal · Teacher
Resources: Reading/Vocabulary
BOOKS
The
Challenger Series
New Readers Press
Although some of the passages in this eight-part
series need to be updated, overall the series is
a good one in that it touches on many of the components
of reading in a very systematic way. I used it primarily
in pre-GED classes where vocabulary building, fluency,
and reading comprehension were key skills to be
mastered.
Word Power
Contemporary Books
This series addresses a pervasive weakness, the
under-developed vocabulary. This series has five
steps based on reading levels: Introductory, Intermediate
1 and 2; and Advanced 1 and 2. Each book teaches
words in context, their spelling and definitions,
as well as using this new vocabulary in writing
activities.
Say
the Word (reading level 3 and above)
ISBN 0-88336-152-3
New Reader’s Press
Department SO4
P.O.Box 35888
Syracuse, NY 13235
800-488-8878
www.newreaderspress.com
This book contains lots of practice for students
who have basic reading skills, but who have little
background with phonics, and may have a problem
reading and spelling words that are new to them.
SmartReader (audiotape
and leveled book series for adults)
By Recorded Books
1-800-535-5499
www.recordedbooks.com
These audiobooks and read-along texts come in a
single package with a teacher’s guide included.
The series comes in two levels: level one for grades
1-2 and level two for grades 3-4. The SmartReader
texts are recorded on two speeds, so each tape has
one side that’s read about 80 words per minute
while the second side is read about 140 words per
minute. The topics and stories are geared for middle-high
school to adult new readers.
WEB
SITES
www.readwritethink.org
This great professional resource is a marriage between
The National Association of Teachers of English
and the International Reading Association. Add the
Marco Polo Project for Internet Education and you
have an amazing resource. Designed primarily for
K-8 teachers, the site has wonderful lessons, standards
and links to web resources that would fill the bill
nicely in an ABE or pre-GED classroom. The lesson
plans are well thought-out, easy to understand,
and follow a core sequence of reading and writing
standards as described by these two nationally recognized
language arts organizations.
www.bemorecreative.com
This website is a great source of odds and ends.
Originally this site started from someone’s
compilation of famous quotations. But it has grown
to include, among others, links to maps and flags
from around the world, a site all about famous women,
and another about legends from many cultures. It’s
not only a useful site for ABE and ESOL teachers,
but its easy navigability makes it a favorite for
students too.
www.howstuffworks.com
If you are teaching any level of reading in the
content areas and science is one of the subjects
you’re covering, you’ll love this website.
You will be able to give your students so much more
background information on all sorts of subjects
with just a touch of the mouse. They too will be
able to answer their own questions that arise from
a science reading by perusing this remarkable site.
As the site’s name implies, it explains how
everything words…from vacuum cleaners to atom
smashers, you’ll find the answer here.
www.powa.org
POWA stands for Paradigm Online Writing Assistant,
and it can really help you understand ways to help
your students’ writing get more “Powa.”
Paradigm is an interactive, menu-driven, online
writer’s guide and handbook. This website
is too complex for many students, but where its
beauty lies is in its use as a tool for teachers.
Teaching writing can be intimidating, but here’s
a resource that can be used as a guide and review
for some of the intricacies of grammar as well as
an aid to the teaching of composition. This very
thorough compendium will remind you of all the tricks
you learned a long time ago in English 101, but
have forgotten. If you teach writing, this site
will be a great addition to your tool chest.