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Growing Up Literate

Learning from Inner-City Families

Catherine Dorsey-Gaines, Kean College, Denny Taylor, Hofstra University

ISBN 978-0-435-08457-8 / 0-435-08457-7 / 1988 / 256pp / Paperback
Imprint: Heinemann
Availability: This title is printed on demand and is nonreturnable. Please allow 1 week for printing.
Grade Level: Adult
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    [This] is not a sentimental book. But it is powerfully moving....The book deserves a wide and attentive audience. It deserves to be read immediately.
    —The Reading Teacher

A couple years ago, Denny Taylor and Catherine Dorsey Gaines made the first of what were to be many visits to families living in the inner city of a major metropolitan area in the Northeast. Their aim: to study the familial contexts in which young Black children living in urban poverty are growing up literate. Through their focus on children who were successfully learning to read and write despite extraordinary economic hardship, this multiracial team presents new images of the strengths of the family as educator and the ways in which the personal biographies and educative styles of families shape the literate experiences of children.

Through the stories of the Shay Avenue families, Taylor and Dorsey-Gaines reach several conclusions that some readers may find surprising.

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Email planningservices@heinemann.com if you would like to contact Catherine Dorsey-Gaines directly about professional development support.

Email planningservices@heinemann.com if you would like to contact Denny Taylor directly about professional development support.

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[This] is not a sentimental book. But it is powerfully moving....The book deserves a wide and attentive audience. It deserves to be read immediately.