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“Ballenger not only lets us peer over her shoulder to see how she and her students construct learning from what she calls ‘puzzling moments,’ but also provides advice and examples for how best to do what she does. She remains a teacher with the focus of a researcher and a researcher with the soul of a teacher.”
—Bob Fecho, Professor, University of Georgia, and author of Is This English?Race, Language, and Culture in the Classroom
“Any teacher—or teacher educator—who finds herself wondering how teacher research could improve her teaching needs to read Puzzling Moments, Teachable Moments. Cynthia Ballenger's close analysis of transcripts allows her readers to see below the surface of classroom conversations and to begin to imagine him or herself as a teacher researcher.”
—Helen Featherstone, Associate Professor Emerita of Teacher Education, Michigan State University
“Ballenger’s fascinating exploration of ‘teaching as research’ offers lucid, rich, and compelling images of what it means for educators to learn from children how best to teach them.”
—Susan L. Lytle, Associate Professor of Education, University of Pennsylvania, and coauthor of Inquiry as Stance: Practitioner Research for the Next Generation
In her new book, bestselling author Cynthia Ballenger explores the intellectual strengths of students that teachers find “puzzling”—poor, urban, immigrant, or bilingual children who do not traditionally excel in school. Ballenger challenges the assumption that these children—whose families in many cases have less formal education, read fewer storybooks, and talk less with their children about school-like topics—have fewer intellectual or academically relevant experiences. This practical book offers a detailed roadmap for traversing the daily work of teaching today’s diverse population, helping educators to refine their work as it unfolds in the classroom. Ballenger guides the reader as she analyzes what the children said, what this indicates about their thinking, and how her dialogues with them informed her teaching.
Book Features:
- Detailed portraits of the daily routines of teaching and learning.
- Rich depictions of bilingual children doing serious work with science and literature.
- Directions for how to listen to children’s ideas and how to analyze classroom discussions.
- Guidance for following the practices of good teacher research.
Cynthia Ballenger is a reading specialist, science teacher, and one of the founding members of the Brookline Teacher Researcher Seminar. Her books include Teaching Other People's Children: Literacy and Learning in a Bilingual Classroom and the edited volume Regarding Children’s Words: Teacher Research on Language and Literacy.