As we head into another school year, I thought I'd update you all on my 
efforts to interest reseachers in studying scrolls and textmapping.  Bottom 
line: the going has been slow; I am still plugging along.

As far as I know, only three studies have been completed -- but none of them 
have been written up.  They were done at a community college, a middle 
school and an elementary school.   Anther study at a university was derailed 
by a graduate student strike, and one at a state college died for lack of 
funding.  From what I hear, the results of the three completed studies were 
strong, but the teachers who completed them do not have the time to close 
the process.  Family emergencies and the usual ups and downs of life have 
their own pull; time passes and the data grows cold (as does the motivation 
to restart the work).  At this stage of the game, research is essentially a 
volunteer and out-of-pocket undertaking.  While this is not the ideal 
situation, it can work.

We all know that this is a familiar stage in the process of innovation.  New 
ideas take time to rise.  We're still very much in the bootstrapping phase 
of things.  Sooner or later, this will take off.  I am trying to speed this 
process by writing the book -- which is intended to reach researchers as 
well as teachers.  With any luck, this will work.

In the mean time, since so many of you have had experience uing scrolls and 
textmapping in your classrooms, I'd like to encourage you to write an 
article that describes what you have found.  It need not be very long and it 
most certainly does not need to be backed by hard data.  A straight telling 
of your experiences would do.  I have compiled a short list of 
publications -- IRA, NCTE, and others -- that regularly and enthusiastically 
publish such articles from classroom teachers.  You'll find it about half 
way down this page: http://www.textmapping.org/collaborate.html  Articles of 
this kind are not peer reviewed, but they can be very influential in 
building support for new ideas and approaches.  And they are also a good way 
for teachers to build their own credentials.  I hope you will consider 
giving this a try.

Sooner or later this will catch.

Thank you for your interest and support.  I look forward to seeing some of 
you in your classrooms this year!

Dave Middlebrook
The Textmapping Project
A resource for teachers improving reading comprehension skills instruction.
www.textmapping.org   |   Please share this site with your colleagues!
USA: (609) 771-1781
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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