Reading Upside Down offers a paradigm shift from achievement gaps to opportunity gaps in literacy instruction. Drawing on the author’s rich experiences working one-on-one with challenged readers, this book presents case studies illustrating the complexities of student learning experiences and the unique circumstances that shaped their acquisition of literacy. Wolter explores eight key factors that contribute to reading challenges in developing readers, including school readiness, the use of prescribed phonics-based programs, physical hurdles, unfamiliarity with English, and special education labeling. With a focus on the differences that educators can make for individual students, the text suggests ways to identify and address early opportunity gaps that can impact students throughout their entire educational career.
Reading Upside Down will help educators to:
Shift from identifying deficit-based achievement gaps among students to addressing opportunity gaps in literacy instruction. Move beyond student labels, categories, or placements to provide true opportunities for children to explore and develop literacy. Take a strength-based view that students are in multiple places of exploration of language and literacies and all children can succeed in becoming readers. Develop a strong sense of ownership and expertise in order to foster inclusion and assure authentic and engaged reading within their classrooms.