Best Practices in Adolescent Literacy Instruction PDF
Best Practices in Adolescent Literacy Instruction PDF
Best Practices in Adolescent Literacy Instruction PDF
Edited by
Kathleen A. Hinchman
Heather K. Sheridan-Thomas
v
Contributors
vii
viii Contributors
intersect with in-school and out-of-school contexts. She has published articles
across a range of academic journals.
Leslie S. Rush, PhD, is Associate Dean for Undergraduate Programs in the College of
Education at the University of Wyoming, where she has long served as an English
teacher educator. Her research interests include literacy coaching in secondary
schools and disciplinary literacy. She is the coeditor of English Education, the
journal of the Conference on English Education, and is a consultant for the
Southern Regional Education Board’s college and career readiness curriculum
development project.
Cynthia Shanahan, PhD, is Professor Emerita of Literacy, Language, and Culture
at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She is a researcher on Project READI, a
reading comprehension study funded by the Institute of Education Sciences that
studies argumentation in history, science, and literature. She also is working on
a college and career readiness curriculum project with the Southern Regional
Education Board.
Timothy Shanahan, PhD, is Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of
Illinois at Chicago, where he was founding director of the Center for Literacy.
Previously he was director of reading for the Chicago Public Schools, and is past
president of the International Reading Association. He has authored more than 200
publications on literacy education and was inducted into the Reading Hall of Fame
in 2007.
Heather K. Sheridan-Thomas, EdD (see “About the Editors”).
Jennifer Speyer, BA, is a history teacher at the Detroit Institute of Technology and a
master’s student at the University of Michigan.
Alfred W. Tatum, PhD, is Professor and Interim Dean of the College of Education at
the University of Illinois at Chicago. His research focuses on improving the literacy
achievement of African American males and on using texts as tools to preserve
one’s humanity. He has authored three books, including Fearless Voices: Engaging
a New Generation of African American Adolescent Male Writers.
Codruta Temple, PhD, is on the faculty at the State University of New York at
Cortland, where she teaches courses in foreign language methods and bilingual and
multicultural education. Her research focuses primarily on adolescents’ acquisition
of subject-specific discourses.
Andrea L. Tochelli, MS, is a former elementary and middle school teacher and
a doctoral candidate in Reading Education at the University at Buffalo, The
State University of New York. Her research interests include the use of digital
technologies for multimodal composing as well as the use of video as a mediation
tool in teacher professional development.
Foreword
Acknowledgments
With special thanks to Craig Thomas, Louise Farkas, and Mary Beth Ander-
son at The Guilford Press, we dedicate this second edition to our colleagues
xvi Preface
Reference
Alvermann, D. E., Jonas, S., Steele, A., & Washington, E. (2006). Introduc-
tion. In D. E. Alvermann, K. A. Hinchman, D. W. Moore, S. F. Phelps, &
D. Waff (Eds.), Reconceptualizing the literacies in adolescents’ lives (2nd
ed., pp. xxi–xxxii). New York: Erlbaum.
Contents
xvii
xviii Contents
Index 383
Part i
Valuing adolescence
cHaPter 1
Alfred W. tatum
Engaging students with texts by honoring their multiple identities has been
a focus of adolescent literacy for more than two decades. However, it is still
unclear whether adolescents who read texts that connect to their multiple
identities fi nd the texts meaningful. In addition, it is unclear whether high
academically performing readers experience more meaningful relationships
with texts than low academically performing readers. I decided to expand
the chapter from the fi rst edition of this book by adding fi ndings from
a more recent study that examined adolescents’ meaningful relationships
with texts, looking at adolescents across ethnicities and academic perfor-
mance by grades.
An examination of this issue is warranted because students’ relation-
ships with texts are constantly changing in relationship to evolving tech-
nologies inside and outside of schools. Also, curricular shifts for U.S.
3
4 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Mosenthal, 1998; Tatum, 2005). It also aligns with Glenn’s (2012) work
on touchstone texts. These are texts in adolescents’ lives that are woven
into their school and social behavior. These are also texts that move ado-
lescents to feel differently about themselves, affect their views of them-
selves and others, and move them to some action in their current time and
space because of ethnic, gender, personal, or other connections with texts
(Tatum, 2008). These texts become part of one’s textual lineage (Tatum,
2009).
Thomas Paine
I discovered the Ogre rising
up before me in a mist.
(p. 24)
Similar to Jack
Robert F. Williams Jack Kerouac’s Clements, The Jacket
Negroes with Guns On the Road
FIGURE 1.1. Eldridge Cleaver’s textual lineage, constructed from reading Soul on Ice (1968).
6
Texts and Adolescents 7
Directions: In each box below, place the title of a text (i.e., book, essay, or poem)
that you think you will always remember. Place only one title in a box. Explain why
you think you will always remember the text or explain why the text was meaningful
to you. Look at the example.
1. Considering the texts that were assigned to you in school during the past year, how
often did you find the texts to be meaningful to you? Circle one.
(1) Never (2) Rarely (3) Sometimes (4) Frequently (5) Always
Strongly Strongly
Disagree Disagree Agree Agree
I read a text that . . . (1) (2) (3) (4)
1. Had a lasting effect on me 1 2 3 4
2. Made me want to do something for 1 2 3 4
someone else
3. I continued to think about after I 1 2 3 4
finished it
4. Started me on a new path 1 2 3 4
5. I reread several times on my own 1 2 3 4
6. Stayed in my mind 1 2 3 4
7. I felt a connection with 1 2 3 4
8. Shaped who I am 1 2 3 4
9. Changed the way I behaved toward 1 2 3 4
other people
10. Opened my mind 1 2 3 4
11. I chose to talk about it with others 1 2 3 4
12. I recommended to others 1 2 3 4
13. Made me feel connected to 1 2 3 4
something important
14. Made me think about moments in 1 2 3 4
my life
15. That was important to me 1 2 3 4
16. Caused me to think the way I think 1 2 3 4
today
17. Changed me 1 2 3 4
The texts the students identified and the explanations they provided
mesh with other research that found that readers interrogate texts for their
authenticity in terms of cultural representations of students’ local contexts
in school and larger cultural contexts outside of school (Clark, 2006; Galda
& Beach, 2004). The students also made varying connections to the texts.
Personal Connections
Several students made personal connections without mentioning ethnicity
or gender. In explaining The Body (Kurieshi, 2004), a ninth-grade Asian
American female offered:
“ ‘The most important things are the hardest things to say. They are
the things you get ashamed of, because words diminish them—words
shrink that seem limitless when they were in your head to no more
than a living size when they are brought out.’ I love this quote because
it is very honest. There are a million things that I want to say to people,
but I am always afraid to do so.”
This student used the text to think about a personal goal of wanting to use
her voice to communicate with people, but she was reticent because of an
internal fear. In this case, the text resonated with the student as she thought
about her personal identity, not necessarily related to ethnicity or gender.
More personal connections emerge from several other students. An
eighth-grade African American male shared that “I like this book because
10 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
I need this book. I feel it.” This is similar to a ninth-grade white male,
who offered, “I can’t afford to forget one word in the book. But honestly,
it’s a great self-help book.” Both students are suggesting that they favor
texts that are personally significant to them. This position is also captured
by the ninth-grade white female who found life lessons in Tuesdays with
Morrie (Albom, 1997), and the ninth-grade Asian American student who
found the strength to believe in herself after reading the Naruto (Kishi-
moto, 2003–2014) manga series.
Adolescent Connections
Several adolescents identified books that had central characters in the same
age range for a significant part of the text. They were able to relate to, or
peep into, the experience of an age peer who influenced their views or emo-
tions in some way. For example, a ninth-grade Latino male, sharing his
thoughts on A Child Called It (Pelzer, 1993), stated, “I love books based
on real life especially if it is on childhood.” He suggested that books about
adolescents resonated with him. An Asian American girl reflected on her
life through a male character, similar in age, in the text, Among the Hidden
(Haddix, 2006). She shared, “It was one of the first books that made me
realize that my life wasn’t as bad as I thought it was.” Luke, the main char-
acter, has to spend 12 years in hiding because his family had him illegally
during a period of government-enforced legislation that prevented parents
from having more than two children. Luke eventually comes out from hid-
ing to find that he must suppress his personal opinions because they are
considered dangerous and threatening to the government. The young man
in the story has to determine what he is willing to sacrifice to live. The
whole notion of suppression of freedoms resonates with adolescents, and I
am assuming this to be the case with this student.
The adolescent connections cross ethnic lines, as illustrated by a
ninth-grade Latino male who finds instruction from the 17-year-old Afri-
can American main character from Harlem in the novel The Contender
(Lipsyte, 1996). The student shared, “This book shows me that I can make
something out of my life from nothing.” He is referring to the main char-
acter, who learns how to become a man after dropping out of high school.
This character overcomes his personal fears and triumphs in the end. This
student does not refer to the main character’s ethnicity or gender, but sug-
gests that he can learn from someone in his peer group.
The suggestions emerging from the students’ voices align neatly with
advice from Gay (2000), who suggests that “Culturally responsive teach-
ing has many different shapes, forms, and effects” (p. 2). She, too, rec-
ognizes the multidimensionality of culturally responsive teaching. This
form of teaching encompasses curriculum content, learning context, class-
room climate, student–teacher relationships, instructional techniques, and
assessments. Gay also warns against the absence of caring in a cultur-
ally responsive approach to literacy teaching. She states, “Caring teachers
are distinguished by their high performance expectations, advocacy, and
empowerment of students as well as by their use of pedagogical practices
that facilitate school success” (p. 62).
Under the bed there is a woman and her daughter just hiding. She is look-
ing at us and worrying so much it is looking like somebody is cutting her
face with a knife. She is smelling like goat and we are wanting to kill
her so we are dragging her out, all of us soldier, but she is holding her
daughter. They are holding each other and shaking like they are having
fever. They are so thin more than us and the skin is hanging down like
elephant skin so I am know she is fat before the war is coming and mak-
ing rich and fat like poor and thin. The girl is so shrinking, she is almost
like unborn baby—I am knowing because I have been taking them from
their mother’s belly to be seeing who is girl and who is boy. Are you my
mother, I am saying. Are you my sister? But they are only screaming like
Devil is coming for them. I am not Devil. I am not bad boy. I am not bad
boy. Devil is not blessing me and I am not going to hell. But still I am
thinking maybe Devil born me and that is why I am doing all of this. . . .
But it is not Devil that is borning me. I am having father and mother and
I am coming from them. (pp. 47–48)
This text will lead students to question why is this atrocity allowed to
happen in our world. Some students may even ask whether the content is
true. These types of thought-provoking texts must be selected with care. I
used the examples above to illustrate the types of controversial texts that
adolescents favor, but that are often not part of the curricula. The costs and
benefits of text selections should be weighed carefully to avoid alienating
teachers, students, or parents.
Texts can be selected that lead students to discuss the conditions that
enable human beings to treat their fellow humans inhumanely or enable
Texts and Adolescents 13
people to deal with inhumane conditioning. Jane Yolen’s (1990) The Dev-
il’s Arithmetic, Lois Lowry’s (1989) Number the Stars, and Julius Lester’s
(1968) To Be a Slave come to mind. Lester offers testimonies of the enslaved
and their “ability to retain humanity under the most inhuman conditions”
(p. 111). I am struck by the words during each reading, particularly when a
slave owner, who professed Christianity, told an enslaved man, “If I catch
you here servin’ God, I’ll beat you. You ain’t got no time to serve God, We
bought you to serve us” (p. 105). Or when a son recalls, “They whipped
my father ‘cause he looked at a slave they killed and cried” (p. 33). He also
writes, “Yet it is all the more remarkable that even two hundred years of
slavery are looked upon matter-of-factly and not as a time of unrelieved
horror” (p. 74). Lester’s novel, as well as the others, if mediated effectively,
will stand the reader in his or her tracks.
The goal is not to depress adolescents with “heavy” texts but to
structure curricula by “considering what issues are worth exploring and
understanding when composing essential questions” to engage adolescents
(Smith & Wilhelm, 2006, p. 62). Unfortunately, we live in a country that
does not have a clear definition of the role of literacy instruction for adoles-
cents. Therefore, little discussion during curriculum conversations focuses
on essential questions that young adolescents should or want to address.
The discussions of 21st-century literacy skills in public policy documents
and the exploration of new literacies primarily in colleges and universities
have not influenced the widespread selection and discussion of texts in mid-
dle and high school classrooms. I think again about the words of Eldridge
Cleaver (1968), who intimated that some texts are difficult to block out;
no matter what you try, they penetrate your thinking. Yet it is easy for
many adolescents to block out texts in schools because most do not allow
students to navigate cultural communities, or they do not reflect cultural
expectations (Galda & Beach, 2004; Moje & Hinchman, 2004) connected
to essential questions that are cognitively challenging for students (Smith
& Wilhelm, 2006).
Responsive teaching and curricula focus on powerful and authentic
texts for adolescents that help them bridge in-school and out-of-school dis-
continuities that exist for many students across ethnicity, gender, and lan-
guage. Walter Mosley’s (2005) 47 begs for consideration of a middle school
audience. This text blends historical and speculative fiction. An excerpt
that promotes visual imagery follows:
It smelled bad in there and it was too hot in the summer and freezing in
the winter. And every night they chained your feet to an eyebolt in the
floor. The men out there were mostly angry and so they were always
fighting or crying or just plain sad. But the worst thing they said about
the slave quarters was that once you were there you stayed there for the
rest of your life. (p. 12)
14 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Students can use this text to wrestle with an essential question related
to breaking the chains that secure one to the floor. This focus is not too dif-
ferent from the students who completed the textual lineages. They shared:
• “I love this book because this book teaches you to be strong, and
always believe in yourself.”—Ninth-grade Asian American female
• “Reading about how a woman was outcast from her society because
of a decision really made me think about my choices.”—Ninth-grade
white female
• “The book shows me that I can make something of my life from
nothing.”—Ninth-grade Latino male
• “I will always remember this book because it taught me that being in
gangs can mess up your life. It was important because it helped me
change my life.”—Ninth-grade Latina female
While the need for culturally responsive pedagogy and curricula as dis-
cussed in this chapter holds true, my current work suggests that being cul-
turally responsive does not necessarily lead to meaningful reading experi-
ences during and after the reading event for low and high academically
performing students. For example, students can find connections to the
texts during the reading event, but the texts fail to connect them to some-
thing important beyond the literacy event. This finding emerged from a sur-
vey study that was conducted to learn more about adolescents’ meaningful
relationships with texts. I end this chapter with a description of the survey
study conducted in 2012.
The 1,194 adolescent students surveyed provided responses indicating
their meaningful relationships with texts. Students from six urban schools,
one suburban school, and one rural school completed the survey: 76.5%
were ages 14–17, 51.6% were white, 76% were first-language English
Texts and Adolescents 15
speakers, 62% lived in a two-parent home, 97% were from a class size
between 20 and 30 students, and 83.6% were between A to C students in
terms of overall school performance. Findings of the survey indicated that
high academically performing adolescents and low-performing adolescents
are “rarely” or “sometimes” reading texts they find meaningful. The sur-
vey data also indicated that adolescents read texts that they continue to
think about or feel connections with, that they talk about with others, that
lead them to think about important moments in their lives and open their
minds, and that they view as important. However, the data also indicated
that adolescents disagree that they are reading texts that start them on a
new path, shape who they are, change the way they behave toward other
people, make them feel connected to something important, cause them to
think the way they think, or change them (See Table 1.1).
While it is clear that adolescents are finding connections with texts in
school, it is unclear why the texts are not connecting them to something
important. The connections make sense in light of the attention that has
been given over the years to paying attention to the identities of adoles-
cents during literacy instruction. It is now time to strive toward having
these meaningful connections students are having with texts translate into
actions beyond the texts. Understanding adolescents’ connections with
texts and working to have the texts connect them to something meaningful
offers a new lens for teaching and mediating texts that extends the varying
connections adolescents make. This understanding adds a new dimension
to culturally responsive pedagogy, and it could be useful for thinking about
Conclusions
In this chapter I discussed the need for examining students’ textual lin-
eages; for understanding texts, students, and contexts; for structuring ped-
agogy and curricula to discuss texts with students in culturally responsive
ways; and for connecting adolescents to something meaningful beyond the
reading event. Students’ voices were used to help define cultural responsive-
ness and its multiple dimensions. It was also made evident that students
connect to texts in a variety of ways: adolescent connections, ethnic con-
nections, gender connections, and personal connections. Also, survey data
were used to identify patterns of meaningful relationships adolescents have
with texts. These student voices helped provide a dynamic blueprint for
discussing texts with adolescents in culturally responsive ways.
However, there is still a divide between what we know and what hap-
pens in classrooms. Several factors contributing to this divide were offered:
structural and curricular handicaps influenced by tradition, public policy,
low levels of reading achievement, lack of research on discussing texts with
adolescents in culturally responsive ways, and the absence of a clear defini-
tion of literacy instruction for adolescents. Fortunately, more attention is
being given to adolescent literacy and best practices to address some of the
challenges and demands for advancing the literacy development of students
who are increasingly attending more diverse schools. This is being acceler-
ated by evolving technologies that are shifting adolescents’ relationships
with texts and policies affecting curricular offerings.
Classroom contexts are changing. Out-of-school contexts are compli-
cated by issues of race, social class, and language. Literacy instruction can-
not afford to ignore either context. I have suggested that we can begin to
discuss texts with adolescents in culturally responsive ways by honoring
what we learn from their growing textual lineages and by building the tex-
tual lineages of students who are without them in relation to the in-school
and out-of-school contexts that influence their lived experiences and histo-
ries. Becoming culturally responsive must be less of a cliché and more of a
clarion call. In addition, I have suggested that we move from connections
to connectedness. I offer the following to strengthen the call. We need to:
This clarion call can help us move culturally responsive literacy teach-
ing from the sidelines, where it is marginalized, to the core of instruction.
It can also help us rethink the roles of text within and beyond the reading
event. These shifts in focus allow us to respond to the needs of all of stu-
dents as they appear in our classrooms, each wrapped in different experi-
ences and histories.
1. Discuss your own and your students’ textual lineages and the insights this
information provides on discussing texts in culturally responsive ways. Ask
your students to identify texts that have been influential to them, and why,
and compare what they say to the texts you identified.
2. Administer the adolescents and texts survey to identify your students’ mean-
ingful relationships with texts.
3. What recently published texts have you encountered that might resonate in
culturally responsive ways with the adolescents you teach? Do keep in mind
that there may be considerable differences between the texts that younger
and older adolescents, and varying communities, find engaging. How do the
texts compare to the texts adolescents are assigned in schools?
4. How might classroom pedagogy and curriculum selections align with and
help to develop students’ lived experiences and histories in culturally respon-
sive ways that they recognize and value?
References
Albom, M. (1997). Tuesdays with Morrie: An old man, a young man, and life’s
greatest lesson. New York: Doubleday.
Angelou, M. (1983). I know why the caged bird sings. New York: Bantam.
Clark, L. W. (2006). Power through voicing others: Girls’ positioning of boys
in literature circle discussion. Journal of Literacy Research, 38, 53–79.
Cleaver, E. (1968). Soul on ice. New York: Delta.
18 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
meaningful discipline-specific
language instruction
for middle school students
for Whom english is an
Additional language
eliane Rubinstein-Ávila
Alisa G. Leckie
The main purpose of this chapter is to convey the many ways middle school
can make content-area concepts comprehensible to students for whom
English is an additional language, by intentionally including opportunities
for language and literacy development to scaffold content knowledge. At the
secondary level, English language learners are likely to be in mainstream
content-area classes. This trend, in addition to the advent of the Common
Core State Standards that emphasize discipline-specific literacy and expo-
sure to complex texts for all students, calls for instruction that scaffolds the
academic language demands of the content being taught. The following are
the points on which we expanded throughout the chapter:
• We posit a rationale for using the term students for whom English is an
additional language.
• We explain the heterogeneity among secondary students for whom
English is an additional language in the United States.
• We convey the importance and advantages of bringing language to the
forefront of content instruction (connection to the Common Core State
Standards).
20
Students for Whom English Is an Additional Language 21
Most teachers are well aware that EALs not only come in all shapes and
sizes, but that they are different in many other ways. Spanish-speaking
students (referred to commonly as Hispanics or Latin@s) are the largest
language minority group across U.S. schools. We want to remind readers
that Spanish is spoken in over 23 countries worldwide; thus Latin@s are
a highly heterogeneous student population who are likely to use different
varieties of Spanish. Also, speakers of the same language do not necessary
share common values, religious beliefs, political ideologies and/or immigra-
tion histories. Although officially most Latin Americans are Roman Catho-
lics, these students may have been socialized in a variety of religious beliefs
and cultural practices. It is important to keep in mind, for example, that
although students from the Dominican Republic and Mexico share Span-
ish as a common language, they do not share the same history or ancestry,
and they are unlikely to share cultural practices or immigration status and
experiences (Rubinstein-Ávila & Johnson, 2008). Moreover, EAL students
vary in family socioeconomic status (SES), or class, which is likely to influ-
ence the educational experiences (formal and informal) to which they have
been exposed (Rubinstein-Ávila, 2003).
Also, not all secondary EALs are immigrants. Many have been born on
U.S. soil but may have lived transnational lives between the United States
and their parents’ countries of origin. It is important to note that although
Puerto Rican students are not “immigrants” per se, they may face many of
the language and adaptation challenges other immigrant students face. In
fact, in some schools refugee students from many parts of the globe (e.g.,
Sudan, Somalia Iraq, Syria), whose families have been granted political
asylum as a result of our government’s far-reaching diplomatic and military
involvement, may outnumber immigrant students.
Consequently, the range of prior educational experiences among
secondary EALs may be vast—from refugee camps, rural areas, multi-
grade, one-room schools taught by a teacher who have only completed the
eighth grade, to exclusive, state-of-the-art, private bilingual (or multilin-
gual) schools, where teachers may hold graduate degrees. Another com-
mon assumption to avoid is the assessment of EALs’ parental education by
the current jobs they hold. Parents who may have been certified teachers,
nurses, or even lawyers and doctors, in their countries of origin may be
employed in the service sector in the United States because of language bar-
riers and a lack of reciprocity of professional certification (Rubinstein-Ávila
& Johnson, 2008).
Students for Whom English Is an Additional Language 23
Discipline-Specific Language:
Implications of the Common Core State
Standards for English Language Arts
for All Secondary Teachers
Emphasizing the structures of language and texts can facilitate the literacy
and language development and access to complex content knowledge for
EALs and, at the same time, all other students. In altering instructional
routines just slightly to include explicit discussions about and practice with
language, teachers can promote second language acquisition and academic
literacy. Many of the content-area literacy practices that benefit the literacy
development of native English speakers are also beneficial to EALs (August
& Shanahan, 2010).
Integrating explicit instruction regarding text structures, word study,
and comprehension strategies facilitates understanding of content while
developing language and literacy skills. With the advent of the CCSS and
their emphasis on disciplinary literacy, it is essential that teachers expose
all students to complex texts with sufficient scaffolding to make those texts
comprehensible. Highlighting vocabulary, language patterns, and text
structures, in addition to incorporating reading strategies and opportuni-
ties to discuss texts and concepts, is the type of scaffolding that can result
in academic success for ELLs.
Students for Whom English Is an Additional Language 25
Because the CCSS emphasize language practices and stress the importance
of exposing all students to complex texts, in essence all single-subject, con-
tent-area teachers will be expected to know how to convey and develop
content knowledge by engaging students in language practices such as
saying, doing, listening, and being that facilitate the conveyance of ideas
and information. We are reminded by Moschkovich (2012) that teachers
who have had proven success with students from nondominant commu-
nities (including EALs/bilinguals) are highly committed to student–home
communication, believe in their students’ academic potential, and reject
deficit-oriented models of their students. Such teachers are likely to hold
high expectations and often are agentive about modifying instruction to
meet their students’ specific linguistic and academic needs.
These demands on secondary teachers are great; nevertheless, so are
the many demands on EAL students. They are expected to closely read
complex text, construct oral and written arguments, elaborate on ideas
collaboratively, and determine key points of oral discourse or written
text. All secondary students are expected to analyze both primary and
secondary sources related to a topic and to incorporate that analysis into
argumentative and explanatory texts, according to CCSS. This level of
discipline-specific literacy is challenging for most students, and even more
so for EALs.
There are many strategies that educators can utilize to help bring lan-
guage to the forefront of instruction in ways that build on the learning of
content. In fact, including language practices in the content areas is likely to
enhance all secondary students’ learning because it provides opportunities
to use the language of the discipline in multiple ways. As students receive a
wider range of academic language use in their classrooms, their engagement
with the content will likely be deeper and more meaningful.
In summary, all secondary teachers, not only ESL teachers, will be
expected to place language at the forefront of content instruction, which
means explicitly underscoring the structures of language and using strat-
egies that promote the close and careful reading of texts. This includes
the scaffolding of high-quality content-area conversations (Fisher, Frey, &
Rothenberg, 2008) and incorporating opportunities for students to process
their learning through oral presentations and writing.
An example of instructional strategies that promote language in the
content areas is the deconstruction of “juicy sentences” (Wong-Fillmore
& Fillmore, 2012) to deepen EALs’ understanding of linguistic structures,
which they are likely to encounter in their academic texts. This strategy
involves emphasizing a single sentence, or focal sentences, and analyz-
ing them both for linguistic and conceptual reasons during instruction.
The authors state that the “juicy sentence” should be worthy of extended
26 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Similarly, the use of text annotations can facilitate EALs’ text comprehen-
sion and bring language to the forefront of instruction. Close reading can be
defined as an examination of the deep structures of a text through repeated
readings (Fisher & Frey, 2012), and text annotations are a way for students
to track their own thinking while reading. When used in conjunction, close
reading and text annotations can help EAL students comprehend complex
content-area texts. One way to join the two strategies is for the teacher to
read a passage from a text to the students while they follow along and then
explain to students the aspects of the text they should focus on and anno-
tate (model) during independent reading. For example, a science teacher
might have students circle the words that indicate the steps in a process,
such as photosynthesis, and then have them jot down questions they have
as they read or connections they make in the margins. Finally, the teacher
has students work through the text again with a partner and compare their
respective annotations and make collaborative meaning of the text.
In this type of instruction, students have the opportunity to read
the same text three times, each with a distinctive purpose. The first oral
reading by the teacher can help students make the spelling/pronunciation
connections of academic vocabulary and get a sense of the content con-
cepts. Through verbal emphasis, teachers can also indicate which words
and phrases warrant attention during students’ independent annotations.
Students for Whom English Is an Additional Language 27
The second reading, with the inclusion of the annotating process, directs
students to specific aspects of the text and provides information to teach-
ers regarding students’ comprehension. As in the previous example, if stu-
dents are to circle words and phrases that show the steps in the process of
photosynthesis, teachers can easily see whether students have marked key
concepts as they are circulating around the room. This provides teachers
an opportunity to walk around the classroom and work with particular
students who are having difficulty (not only EALs). The final reading of
the text with a partner provides students, especially EALs, the opportunity
to discuss the text and clarify concepts with a peer. We elaborate on this
strategy further in the next section.
Several studies have shown that the majority of talk in classrooms is done
by the teacher, not the students—particularly in classrooms with low-
achieving students and language-minority students (Guan Eng Ho, 2005;
Lingard, Hayes, & Mills, 2003). Instead, EALs need multiple and varied
opportunities to engage in classroom conversations in which they produce
the language of schooling and express their learning. Learning cannot be
a passive endeavor for EALs; they cannot simply be recipients of written
and spoken information. They need to be the speakers and the writers so
they can process content concepts, improve their academic language flu-
ency, and practice what they learn. One way to do this is through “content-
area conversations” (Fisher et al., 2008). Content-area conversations are
types of classroom talk that emphasize the use of academic language. When
thoughtfully incorporated and appropriately scaffolded, classroom talk
simultaneously fosters the active engagement of students, promotes lan-
guage development, and facilitates the comprehension of content concepts.
The key to successful classroom talk is in the planning and the scaf-
folding. Teachers need to determine points in a lesson or unit of study that
warrant the inclusion of focused student talk. Teachers also need to decide
on the academic words and phrases that students should use to practice
academic talk and how she/he will scaffold the conversation so that stu-
dents are mandated to use those target words and phrases. The following
scenario based on a sixth-grade mathematics lesson exemplifies each of
these steps.
In a series of lessons focused on order of operations, the teacher has
provided enough direct instruction and guided practice using the acronym
PEMDAS (parentheses, exponents, multiply, divide, add, subtract) to help
students remember the steps to following in solving multistep equations.
The goal is to provide students an opportunity to engage in independent
practice and to explain their application of PEMDAS. An instructional
28 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Language Objectives
Students will be able to:
30 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Activities
Asking students to share whether they, or their parents, have ever partici-
pated in a protest, or whether they remember any recent protests in the
news is likely to generate some interest and establish broad background
knowledge/experience on the topic. Students can be expected to take notes
of a lecture-style lesson, with an accompanying PowerPoint presentation
(which would incorporate key facts about each of the events, in addition
to visuals and brief video clips). The five key vocabulary terms (patriot,
resistance, protest, tax, and impose) are also defined in the presentation
and integrated into it meaningfully and as often as they are applicable.
For example, a slide titled “The Boston Massacre” contains the following
facts:
Notice the use of bold to highlight key terms as well as the limited amount
of information. The goal for the presentation is an initial familiarity with
the key terms and events, not a comprehensive understanding of events
and relationships. However, to supplement the basics, the slide could then
be followed with a visual or a short video clip. Websites such as www.
history.com and www.pbs.com are stable and provide images of primary
source documents as well as a wide variety of video clips. These nonlin-
guistic inputs help students develop initial understandings of content-area
concepts. The use of visuals and video is particularly beneficial on the first
day of instruction.
Although there are several ways of taking notes, Cloze notes are help-
ful to EALs and easy for teachers to prepare from their digital presenta-
tion. For example, the above “Boston Massacre” slide could be copied and
pasted into a Word document, and then the teacher can simply replace
some of the key words with blank lines:
This form of notes allows EALs to pay attention to what the teacher is
saying and still record accurate content information. It is often difficult for
EALs to attend to a teacher’s lecture and take notes simultaneously because
of the high levels of language such an act entail. Reducing the linguistic
demand while still providing access to academic language allows EALs to
develop both content-area concepts and academic language.
Language Objectives
Students will be able to:
Activities
The “expert group” component of the jigsaw structure allows teachers to
differentiate independent reading tasks. Therefore, prior to the lesson the
teacher should select and/or adapt three brief texts related to each event.
The published social studies textbook as well as websites like the two men-
tioned in the previous section are excellent sources for texts. Using dif-
ferent sources provides ready-made differentiation because they tend to
include varying degrees of detail. For example, one source could provide
a brief summary, whereas another would have an extended description.
Because this reading task will primarily be an independent one, EALs with
lower levels of English proficiency should be provided with a shorter, sim-
pler text.
At the onset of instruction, the teacher places students into heteroge-
neous groups of three, mixing EALs among the mainstream students. Each
group gets a set of readings related to one of the four events. In order to
guide their reading, students receive the following prompt: “Determine the
Who, Why, and So What of your focal event. Identify specific places in the
text that support your answer.” This prompt gives students a purpose for
reading and expands on the basic information presented in the previous
32 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
lesson. It also provides a way for the teacher to monitor student comprehen-
sion as they circulate while students are reading.
After individual group members finish reading their text, the group
has a brief discussion of their individual readings focused on the Who,
Why, and So What of the event. Then they determine the two best pieces
of information to add to the previous days’ presentation about their event.
Their final step is to develop a simple visual that depicts their event and
relates at least two key terms. Each group member makes his or her own
version of the visual to help describe the event to a new group in the next
lesson. Students may also write words or phrases on the back of the visual
to help them remember what to say. This scaffold is particularly useful to
EALs and other students who are uncomfortable sharing in group situa-
tions.
Language Objectives
Students will be able to:
• Clearly describe their focal event including at least two key vocabu-
lary terms.
• Complete a graphic organizer connecting the four key events.
Activities
The teacher places students into groups of four, with one representative
from each event per group. Students are given about 5 minutes to present
the information about their event using their visual to guide them. Listen-
ing students should add new information to their notes from the first day’s
lesson. While students are working, the teacher circulates to monitor use
of academic language and ask questions of group members to check for
comprehension.
When all members have presented, groups complete a graphic orga-
nizer to compare and contrast the four events; a modified Venn diagram or
a semantic feature analysis chart would work well in this situation. After
completing the organizer, groups need to write several sentences explaining
the connections among the four focal events.
Although there is a lot of language use and production in this lesson,
Students for Whom English Is an Additional Language 33
the group structure helps EALs of varying English proficiencies access the
content. Students listen to the content, add a few pieces of information to
their notes, and work collaboratively to compare/contrast the four events.
The multiple modes of input and the group structure facilitate comprehen-
sion and participation among EALs.
Lesson 4: Assessment
Content Objective
Students will demonstrate their understanding of four events leading up to
the American Revolution.
Language Objectives
Students will be able to:
Activities
A brief assessment of students’ understanding related to the four events
leading up to the American Revolution is warranted after 3 days of
instruction. Straightforward multiple-choice questions that are based on
students’ notes are appropriate for EALs of all proficiency levels. The main
difference in assessment for EALs is the teacher’s expectation regarding
paragraph development. The content of paragraphs should be correct, but
EALs might write less and have sentence construction errors. The goal is
to assess their understanding of content and provide another opportunity
for them to practice and apply the academic language embedded in the
content area.
Conclusion
1. Who are the EAL students across your classes? What do you know about
their prior formal education experience?
2. Which one of the strategies provided in this chapter could be implemented
in your content area?
3. Review the texts (including, of course, visual texts) your students will be
exposed to, and try to compose one or two language objectives to make the
linguistic demands of the text explicit both to you and your students.
References
david G. O’Brien
deborah R. dillon
This chapter:
36
The Role of Motivation in Engaged Reading 37
by their peers and express concerns over the performance of others in com-
parison with themselves.
Perceptions about one’s competence affect the value and interest placed
on particular subjects and tasks and, in the end, one’s motivation. For
example, global and national profiles of adolescent readers in general indi-
cate a crucial need for a focus on motivation approaches that can increase
adolescents’ engagement in reading. For example, Guthrie (2008) noted
that U.S. fourth graders are “astonishingly low” in intrinsic motivation
compared with peers from other countries using an indicator of attitudes
toward reading and reading by adolescents’ own interests outside of school.
What Guthrie and his colleagues call a “general disengagement” from read-
ing among adolescents they attribute to a range of issues, from a lack of
parental support, to media distraction away from print, to negative percep-
tions of reading in school.
Before we start the central discussion about motivation, adolescents,
and the subject of reading, we acknowledge that the term adolescence has
many definitions and that individual students’ identities are much more
complex and significant than membership in a community, developmental
stage, or age group (see Dillon & Moje, 1998; Moje & Dillon, 2006). We
touch on developmental issues aligned generally with chronological age in
two groups of students: (1) typically progressing, competent readers; and (2)
so-called “struggling” readers. For the first group, we look at learners who
have traversed the excitement of the earliest stage of learning how to read,
the engaging experience of accessing new worlds through texts, the identifi-
cation with characters in stories who are like friends, and the association of
reading with community and enjoyable time with peers and teachers.
Many youth in the age range of 10–11 years have learned to read nar-
rative texts, take an interest in series books, and have favorite authors and
genres. But many of these same students start to feel reservations about
reading as a school subject or reading related to learning across the cur-
riculum. They start to dislike reading textbooks in school subjects and
form some soon-to-be deeply engrained notions of reading tasks related
to schoolwork that may mitigate against their future motivation to read a
range of texts for a variety of purposes.
The latter group, the struggling readers, by age 7 or 8 have started to
see themselves as less competent than their peers. At this relatively early
age they are becoming painfully aware of the difference between ability
and effort. They are starting to disengage from reading and other literate
practices to preserve self-esteem, realizing that getting better seems beyond
their control. Overall, they read much less than more competent peers,
they develop coping strategies to negotiate school tasks without reading,
and they fall further and further behind. Next, we present frameworks for
thinking about how to motivate and engage readers—with some distinc-
tions between competent and struggling or disengaged readers.
40 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Motivation Frameworks
for Guiding Best Practices
Why hasn’t the topic of motivation found its way into discussions about
reading and literacy learning and into teachers’ practices? First, much
of the current discussion about adolescent literacy concerns struggling
readers, particularly how to bring these readers “up to grade level.” The
predominant model for “not leaving anyone behind” embraces the most
technically efficient solution for equipping these youth with strategies and
skills that will help them read more proficiently, that is, proficient reading
as defined by performance on large-scale standardized assessments (see a
critique of this idea and No Child Left Behind by Dillon, 2003). Using
motivation to engage readers, although currently a popular topic, has been
theoretically elusive, and the intersecting frameworks that define the field
have been difficult to incorporate into either instructional frameworks or
assessment plans. We propose a new way to think about these intersect-
ing frameworks (see Figure 3.1, pp. 48–49). Specifically, we note that (1) a
strategy must foster the deliberate cognitive processing that a reader uses in
selecting and monitoring a plan to attain a goal and (2) the reader must be
supported in assessing the goal as valuable, the latter being tied to motiva-
tion and engagement theory.
Nevertheless, for practitioners who want to delve into the rich theo-
retical traditions in achievement motivation, the inquiry will yield some
strong, time-tested practices. For example, researchers have revisited the
constructs of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation and unearthed some com-
mon misconceptions in relation to achievement. Several scholars (Sansone
& Harackiewicz, 2000) have analyzed reward systems to determine which
ones work and which do not in various instructional contexts. For exam-
ple, a recent study found no statistically significant effects on standardized
math or reading outcomes in Chicago, New York City, or Washington,
D.C., to support the effect of financial incentives on student achievement
(Fryer, 2011). Other scholars have reviewed 30 years of research and pre-
sented current work on achievement motivation, including how instruc-
tional practices can actually contribute to increased motivation (Wigfield
& Eccles, 2001). In addition, several researchers have taken great pains to
translate the knowledge base on achievement motivation into specific prac-
tices for teachers (e.g., Alderman, 2008). Guthrie and his colleagues have
directed their attention to motivation in literacy, particularly in the area
of reading. For example, Guthrie, Wigfield, and Perencevich (2004) exam-
ined elementary school classroom contexts that promote engaged reading,
focusing specifically on Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction (CORI)—a
relatively new framework with potential that has yet to be realized, espe-
cially with adolescent learners, through ongoing development.
One of the most significant early discussions of how motivation frame-
works relate to specific practices in reading, particularly as reading actually
The Role of Motivation in Engaged Reading 41
Teachers can make subtle but powerful changes to their practices that
can improve students’ motivation. We have developed sets of these pos-
sible practices, based on many motivation frameworks, including the ones
42 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
(continued)
The Role of Motivation in Engaged Reading 43
highlighted in Table 3.1. Because the frameworks overlap, one set of prac-
tices based on a particular foundation might engender other sets of prac-
tices based on complementary research. For example, there are motivating
ways of presenting books and other reading material to children and youth;
there are motivating ways to engage adolescents who have become disen-
gaged with reading in school; and there are motivating ways to design and
present tasks related to reading that learners find more engaging than typi-
cal school tasks.
Also, when looking more at the panorama of a classroom rather than
The Role of Motivation in Engaged Reading 45
As is apparent from Table 3.1, many adolescents who are competent readers
and believe they are competent readers are increasingly unlikely to want
to read in school and less likely to choose reading for pleasure the longer
they are in school. Reading, which had almost universal appeal when these
youth were in preschool and primary grades, has been replaced with read-
ing-as-subject. Reading, which used to be an adventure, an engaging and
nurturing social experience, becomes a set of tedious tasks leading to the
demonstration of narrowly defined competencies—grades on homework
assignments, quizzes and tests, and meeting standards. The trust that tod-
dlers and primary-age children gave freely to teachers who guided them to
exciting encounters in stories has been replaced by a distrust of teachers
who assign reading in textbooks students view as ill-structured exposition
and as compendia of not-so-useful information. This disengagement and
lack of motivation can be reversed, at least in some measure, by drawing
from the frameworks in Table 3.1.
46 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Almasi and Fullerton (2012) define strategies as “The deliberate cognitive processing a
person uses in selecting and monitoring a plan to attain a goal” (p. 3). In comparison,
our strategic engagement model adapts their notions to focus systematically on twin
strategies, with motivation and engagement at the core. We (Dillon & O’Brien) posit that
both traditional strategies steps and specific plans to foster motivation and engagement
must be made explicit, side by side. For example, to foster agency in meeting a goal,
two things must happen: (1) a strategy must foster the deliberate cognitive processing
that a reader uses in selecting and monitoring a plan to attain a goal and (2) the reader
must be supported in assessing the goal as valuable, the latter being tied to motivation
and engagement theory.
The reader has the ability to Explicitly tie monitoring to “online” agency and
monitor the process to see recursive agency: Monitoring is attention to whether the
whether he/she has attained chosen actions are working strategically toward meeting
the goal and to make the goal and include a stance of control. As a reader, I
adjustments as necessary have options if this is not working and it is my choice to
(combined Almasi points 4 pick action B. If at the end of the reading, I assess that I
and 5). did not meet the goal, it is my choice to start over with a
new plan.
Example: This could be applied to instructional routines leading to strategic reading—
for example, one could modify list–group–label or SQ3R so that the specific strategic
components are aligned with motivation and engagement components.
reading skills and strategies, but they also experience failure on a daily
basis, develop negative self-perceptions, and position themselves as incom-
petent based on early self-appraisals, formal and informal appraisals from
others, and cultural identity and its discursive formations and practices
(Hall, 2009). In response to this failure, students develop accompanying
intricate rationalizations and coping strategies that protect them from
additional failure. These factors must be as systematically addressed as the
teaching of skills and strategies—even more so with disengaged learners.
Practices based on key motivation constructs can be used by educators to
revive students’ confidence and self-efficacy and convince struggling read-
ers that they can use and develop skills and strategies that result in meeting
goals that are attributable to factors within their control. Of course, there is
some overlap in addressing the three questions above for normally achiev-
ing students, but in the case of struggling readers, the instruction may be
more like a targeted intervention due to the severity of disengagement and
the need to resurrect something positive within relatively few remaining
years in school. The sociocultural factors do not as neatly map onto the
three questions addressed below as more traditional motivation constructs
because ongoing discursive identity construction based on cultural mem-
bership is more complex and continually sustained over time.
Conclusion
1. Read the research base and work leading to key motivation constructs. An
understanding of these constructs will help you comprehend why particular
modifications of tasks and literacy contexts should make a difference in
students’ perceptions and achievement.
2. Systematically map out modifications that could be made to your current
instructional plans. A planning activity that we have used successfully with
our school-based colleagues is one in which they have listed current read-
ing assignments and related activities in one column, and then have used a
multiple-column bridging chart to explore alternatives. Part of this activity
requires using some existing frameworks for systematically critiquing cur-
rent practices with a goal of modifying as many as possible so that they are
more motivating. For example, we use the “Six C’s” (choice, challenge, con-
trol, collaboration, constructing meaning, and consequences), generated by
Turner and Paris (1995), to provide a way to critique existing instructional
frameworks. The purpose of the Six C’s is to help teachers think of open-
ended tasks rather than the more typical closed tasks. Table 3.2 defines each
of the C’s and shows possible transformations of closed tasks to open-ended
tasks.
3. Videotape several classroom lessons (e.g., lessons you teach and lessons
taught by peer educators). The taped lessons should include interactions
between you and your students and segments where you provide feedback
to students during reading instruction and related tasks. Using a framework
for analyzing classroom interactions, critique your lesson interactions or a
peer’s interactions and list ways you or your colleagues could improve on
how you motivate students via your comments, suggestions, and feedback.
56 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Challenge: Allow students In a high school reading The students in the read-
to modify tasks so the dif- lab designed for students ing lab are given the broad
ficulty and interest levels who struggle the most in topic, “The impact of vio-
are challenging. Demon- reading (defined as the lence in the media on adoles-
strate the many ways one lowest 2-3% in perfor- cents.” Each pair is asked to
can complete a tasks; show mance on comprehension submit a plan in which they
concrete examples to stu- and vocabulary subtests of decide on which medium
dents of successful but dif- the state achievement test), (e.g., film, TV, video games)
ferent approaches to tasks; students can pick partners they want to use. In addi-
teach students to assess and choose among several tion, they have to plan and
whether tasks are too dif- topics focusing on the storyboard the process they
ficult or too easy for them impact of violence in the will use and then plan a
and how to adjust goals media on adolescents. Each possible outcome of their
or strategies for appropri- pair completes an inquiry project based on their
ate difficulty; point out project based on teacher perception of the level of
how students have molded guidelines. difficulty and challenge they
tasks to their interests; and think is appropriate for their
assign tasks that can be abilities and time frame
modified in many ways. (e.g., design a web page or a
multimedia project presenta-
tion on PowerPoint; make a
mini-documentary).
References
Ames, C., & Archer, J. (1988). Achievement goals in the classroom: Students’
learning strategies and motivation processes. Journal of Educational Psy-
chology, 80, 260–267.
Bandura, A. (1977). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control. New York: Freeman.
Brophy, J. E. (1981). Teacher praise: A functional analysis. Review of Educa-
tional Research, 51, 5–32.
Covington, M. V., & Dray, E. (2002). The developmental course of achieve-
ment motivation: A need-based approach. In A. Wigfield & J. S. Eccles
(Eds.), Development of achievement motivation (pp. 33–56). San Diego:
Academic Press.
Dillon, D. R. (2003). In leaving no child behind have we forsaken individual
learners, teachers, schools, and communities? In C. Fairbanks, J. Worthy,
B. Maloch, J. Hoffman, & D. Schallert (Eds.), Fifty-second yearbook of
the National Reading Conference (pp. 1–31). Milwaukee, WI: National
Reading Conference.
Dillon, D. R., & Moje, E. B. (1998). Listening to the talk of adolescent girls:
Lessons about literacy, school, and life. In D. E. Alvermann, K. A. Hinch-
man, D. W. Moore, S. F. Phelps, & D. R. Waff (Eds.), Reconceptualizing
the literacies in adolescents’ lives (pp. 193–223). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Dole, J. A. (2003). Professional development in reading comprehension instruc-
tion. In A. P. Sweet & C. E. Snow (Eds.), Rethinking reading comprehen-
sion (pp. 176–191). New York: Guilford Press.
Duffy, G. G.(2003). Explaining reading: A resource for teaching concepts,
skills, and strategies. New York: Guilford Press.
Dweck, C. S., & Elliott, E. S. (1983). Achievement motivation. In P. H. Mussen
(Ed.), Handbook of child psychology (3rd ed., pp. 643–691). New York:
Wiley.
Eccles, J. S., Adler, T. F., Fetterman, R., Goff, S., Kaczala, C. M., & Meece,
J. L. (1983). Expectations, values, and academic behaviors. In J. T.
Spence (Ed.), Perspectives on achievement and achievement motivation
(pp. 75–146). San Francisco: Freeman.
Eccles, J. S., Wigfield, A., & Schiefele, U. (1998). Motivation to succeed. In N.
Eisenberg (Ed.), Handbook of child psychology (5th ed., Vol. 3, pp. 1017–
1095). New York: Wiley.
Fryer, R. G. (2011). Financial incentives and student achievement: Evidence
from randomized trials. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 126, 1755–
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Guthrie, J. T. (2008). Reading motivation and engagement in middle and high
school: Appraisal and intervention. In J. T. Guthrie (Ed.), Engaging ado-
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tzel & A. Wigfield (Eds.), Handbook of motivation at school (pp. 503–
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Guthrie, J. T., & Wigfield, A. (Eds.). (1997). Reading engagement: Motivating
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Guthrie, J. T., & Wigfield, A. (2000). Engagement and motivation in reading.
60 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Margaret C. Hagood
This chapter examines the uses of Discourse study in order to develop the
literacies of 21st-century critically conscious citizens. It covers the follow-
ing:
The United States is more diverse than ever before. Of its more than 315
million people, the 2010 U.S. Census shows a noteworthy breakdown (see
Table 4.1). It is projected that by 2043, people who identify themselves
62
Using Discourse Study as an Instructional Practice 63
identity and literacies in school and then resume their acquired identity
and literacies when at home. In this case both Primary and Secondary Dis-
courses remain intact, one not influencing the other.
In the second option, when the identity kit associated with a Second-
ary Discourse is wholly refuted, the person has difficulty succeeding in that
Secondary Discourse because there is no acknowledgment of any shared
structure. In this case, the person either chooses not to learn the Second-
ary Discourse or the person doesn’t understand how to learn the Discourse
because acquisition of the Discourse is not explicitly taught. As in the first
option, nothing changes between the Primary and Secondary Discourses.
The third option refers to what Gee (1990) calls “mushfake.” This
approach to Discourse mismatch requires the partial acquisition through
meta-knowledge and tactical uses of the Secondary Discourse—just enough
of the associated literacies—to create an identity kit to make do within the
Discourse. The person learns the structure of the Secondary Discourse to
work within and to navigate it, but doesn’t really buy into it. Such learn-
ing of Secondary Discourse is a means for getting by, not for making any
changes to the structure of the Discourse itself. When this happens, folks
are fine with getting along in that way.
The fourth choice, however, opens up possibilities for acknowledge-
ment, growth, and change related to diversity of literacies found in Second-
ary Discourses. This choice recognizes the power of the person and the
power of the Discourse, each to influence the other. Gee (1999) described
this work as borderland discourse. A borderland discourse is a commu-
nity discourse wherein members of different Secondary Discourses through
mutual recognition identify the disparities between their Secondary Dis-
course and use meta-knowledge of both Discourse group’s identity kits
to influence the literacies of both Discourses. Of all the choices, this one
allows for most movement and change within the structures of Discourses
via attention to different and diverse literacies of the identity kits of the
Discourses. Borderland discourses have the potential to transform both
Discourses. Borderland discourses have been documented in the literacies
of diverse ethnic groups of urban middle and high school students in a com-
mon outdoor space during break from school (Gee, 1999) and in Alsup’s
(2006) study of preservice teachers’ identity formation. In both cases, the
groups’ cognitive dissonance of their understanding and uses of Second-
ary Discourses influenced the others’ literacies. The Secondary Discourse
structures of both groups shifted so as to open up new spaces for identities
and related literacies.
Invariably, all people experience matches and mismatches between
Discourses that affect their literacies and learning. Research over the past
decade about Discourses of various groups has documented matches and
mismatches between their literacies associated with their identities and
has revealed outcomes reflected in the choices described above. (See, e.g.,
Using Discourse Study as an Instructional Practice 67
Example of Instruction
Using Discourse in an In-School Setting
In their work with 91 African American high school students, Fisher and
Lapp (2013) employed Discourse instruction to teach students how to iden-
tify, deconstruct, and use language appropriate within different Secondary
Discourses. Acknowledging students’ Primary Discourses constructed from
identity kits that used African American Vernacular English (AAVE), they
incorporated contrastive analysis instruction to explicitly teach students
the differences between different home (Primary) and school (Secondary)
language patterns. As students learned to analyze differences, they devel-
oped metacognitive skills that allowed them the power to choose different
literacy practices appropriate for different Discourses.
Instruction occurred for at least 15 minutes (and up to 85 minutes)
4 days a week during English class over 2 years to develop their language
skills (for reading, writing, speaking, and listening) across Discourses at
the word, phrase, and sentence level. Careful to acknowledge the validity
of Primary and Secondary Discourses, Fisher and Lapp designed several
activities. Students learned how to compare the identity kits of home/Pri-
mary and school/Secondary Discourse by identifying different audiences,
the purpose of communication, and the best word use for sharing informa-
tion with a specified recipient.
Beyond teacher modeling of academic English, contrastive analysis and
situationally appropriate language instruction over the 2 years included the
following:
Example of Instruction
Using Discourse in an After-School Setting
to publish the dictionary for wider audiences, the members of The Attic felt
that it could be used against them. In this case, they chose to use the text
only among frequenters of The Attic. In this study, adolescents’ discussions
led to cognitive dissonance and created contexts where the study of identi-
ties and literacies led to action and advocacy for diverse perspectives.
(continued)
Using Discourse Study as an Instructional Practice 73
bhttp://namle.net/publications/core-principles
c h t t p : / / d i g i t a l l e a r n i n g . m a c f o u n d . o r g / a t f / c f / %7 B 7 E 4 5 C 7 E 0 -A 3E 0 - 4B8 9 -AC 9C -
E807E1B0AE4E%7D/JENKINS_WHITE_PAPER.PDF
college and career ready. To that end, the CCSS intends to produce learn-
ers who “reflexively demonstrate the cogent reasoning and use of evidence
that is essential to both private deliberation and responsible citizenship in
a democratic republic” (p. 3). The other documents hold similar foci. The
purpose for learning the MLE is to develop active citizens as effective com-
municators and critical thinkers. Similarly, the purpose of the work of the
PC is to develop youths’ abilities to be “full participants in contemporary
culture” (p. 8). The purpose of all the documents is to use students’ literacy
learning to mold them into responsible and active citizens who participate
fully as effective communicators and critical thinkers using reasoning and
evidence. Because the United States continues to become more diverse, an
active citizenry must be aware of the various literacies and related identity
kits, which influence the structures of Primary and Secondary Discourses
and literacies in people’s lives.
74 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Fisher and Lapp’s (2013) and Blackburn’s (2005) studies point to several
benefits of using Discourse study as an instructional strategy to help stu-
dents understand the relationship between structures that define literacies
and their ability to influence those structures to affect change. Across both
studies, the benefits as described earlier included the following:
Table 4.3 shows an analysis of the benefits of Discourse study relative to the
purposes for learning, qualities of learners who are 21st-century literate,
and approaches of implementation across the CCSS, MLE, and PC. The
benefits of Discourse study as an instructional strategy maps clearly onto
the core values and principles of three specific areas outlined in these docu-
ments: (1) valuing print and nonprint text, (2) developing multiple perspec-
tives, and (3) creating conscientious citizenship.
Employs explicit
instruction to
develop meta-
awareness.
teachers should teach, but not how to teach it. The MLE similarly states
the import of knowing “not only what to teach but also how we teach it”
(p. 2), but doesn’t give specific instructional strategies for the core prin-
ciples outlined. And while the PC document provides detailed vignettes of
users’ facility with the core skills outlined and possible activities, it doesn’t
give instructional strategies for teaching the skills described.
Without specific pedagogy or curricula about how to teach these
standards, teachers and curriculum developers must design pedagogy and
instruction for implementation. On one hand, it is refreshing that authors
of these documents value teachers’ expertise and autonomy to create con-
textually meaningful instruction. But for some teachers, especially those
who haven’t explored the nuances of different kinds of literacies of diverse
groups, this autonomy may be debilitating rather than freeing.
Conclusion
1. After teaching students about Primary and Secondary Discourses, have stu-
dents create a chart reflecting these categories. Have them brainstorm a list
of the literacies they use at home and ones they use at school. Then have
them subgroup the lists according to various literacies: texts I read, texts I
write, texts I listen to, texts I speak, texts I produce. Have them bring one
example of text for each Primary and Secondary Discourse to school.
2. Create opportunities for cognitive dissonance: Have students share their
text examples in small groups. Have other students guess whether the text
is a Primary or Secondary Discourse text and state why. Then have students
discuss the text lists in small groups. Have each person choose a text from
those brought to class and have them analyze it and create a Primary or
Secondary text from it, based upon their own experiences.
78 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
3. Have students analyze how they use Primary and Secondary Discourses to
assume, reject, mushfake, and create borderland crossings in their lives.
4. Have students examine various published works (e.g., favorite blogs, mov-
ies, Facebook posts, or language used by characters in literature) to deter-
mine the Discourses used. Students can analyze the text by the language and
images used and the identities presented.
5. Invite community members to the class to discuss the importance of under-
standing and using different Discourses in their work.
References
Leigh A. Hall
Aubrey Comperatore
BacKground inFormation
And we need to listen to the youths. We need to see them as people who want
desperately to succeed, as people who are demonstrating in numerous ways that they
are capable and cognitively sophisticated beings.
—Morrell (2010, p. 149)
What does it mean to teach literacy to youth who struggle with academic lit-
eracies? If we listen to reports of how our youth perform on a national level,
we get the message that most of them have limited literacy skills and will
80
Teaching Literacy to Youth Who Struggle with Academic Literacies 81
What are academic literacies? At their core, academic literacies are about
helping students learn not just knowledge but how knowledge is created
and communicated within each discipline (Moje, 2008). In addition, stu-
dents should learn how to evaluate and critique the knowledge presented
to them in school and should learn how to participate in the different aca-
demic communities.
How we approach working with our youth in relation to developing
their academic literacies is changing. The implementation of the Common
82 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
Core State Standards (CCSS) has shifted greater attention to how students’
academic literacies develop across all subject areas and grade levels. Devel-
oping academic literacies, for all students, has become the responsibility
of every teacher. No longer can the argument be made that youth who
have academic literacy difficulties are the primary responsibility of English
teachers or special pull-out classes.
The CCSS provide each subject area with its own set of reading stan-
dards that are intended to support academic literacy development for each
domain and grade. On the surface, the standards appear to be generic. For
example, in social studies/history and science, students are expected to pay
attention to how texts are structured and cite textual evidence in making
claims. Although the standard is worded the same for both domains, how
they are enacted and carried out will look unique to each area. Students
will need to learn how texts are structured and how to use those texts to
make arguments in ways that are specific to social studies/history and sci-
ence. As a result, teachers in both disciplines will need to work with stu-
dents to help them develop these abilities.
While the CCSS are a step in the right direction, they also carry the
risk of promoting literacy only as a skills-based endeavor (Burns, 2012).
Developing strong instruction that will support the needs of youth who
struggle with academic literacies will require doing more than identifying
and teaching skills in an isolated, autonomous manner. As Lea and Street
(2010) explain, instruction that utilizes an academic literacies model will
treat literacy instruction “as social practices that vary across context, cul-
ture, and genre” (p. 368). The reading and writing practices that students
engage in will be viewed as situated and varied and will change across the
different disciplines.
Working toward the standards set forth by the CCSS can be a chal-
lenge to even the most experienced teacher. The standards require us to
rethink how we engage students with texts and what our instruction to
support them in developing the literacies they need to read, write, view,
and otherwise use texts looks like. However, the standards also require and
create space for students to learn how to engage with a variety of texts in
new ways, including critically reading and analyzing nontraditional texts,
such as media, and creating multimodal texts (Dalton, 2012/2013). We see
this as an exciting time to rethink how we approach developing academic
literacies with our students.
make positive changes (Hall, Burns, & Edwards, 2011). When speaking
to them, you are likely to find they often enjoy reading, want to learn, and
wish to become better readers of academic texts. Even when they appear
disengaged or resistant, they are often watching and listening in an attempt
to learn something (Hall, 2010).
If youth with academic literacy difficulties are interested in changing
their situation, what is causing the holdup? First consider that students’
understandings of who they are as readers, or their reading identities,
are formed early in their lives (Brown, 2011). According to Hall (2012a,
p. 369):
The term reading identity refers to how capable individuals believe they
are in comprehending texts, the value they place on reading, and their
understandings of what it means to be a particular type of reader within
a given context (Hall, Johnson, Juzwik, Wortham, & Mosley, 2010;
McRae & Guthrie, 2009).
Although students can assign themselves a reading identity, they are often
assigned one by their teachers, peers, and family members (Gee, 2000/2001).
In school, there exists a collective understanding about what it means to
be identified as a particular type of reader. Students are typically presented
with three possible reading identities: good, average, or poor reader. These
identities are usually formed according to how successful students are at
understanding and engaging with texts in the ways sanctioned by teachers,
schools, and curriculum (Collins, 2013). While students may not always
agree with the identities they are assigned, they often have little say about
the reading identities placed on them in school.
Being assigned an identity comes with steep consequences, both posi-
tive and negative. Students who engage with texts and use reading instruc-
tion in ways that are sanctioned by teachers and schools are more likely to
receive assistance from their teachers, be publicly praised as good readers,
and given authority to determine what texts mean. Students who do not
attempt to acquire the socially accepted identity of a good reader risk being
marginalized by their teachers and peers and often have little agency in
their classrooms.
Attempting to shed the struggling reader identity is not simply a matter
of reading more or applying instruction differently. Attempting to change
reading identities carries social risks. Youth with academic literacy difficul-
ties are aware that they stand to increase their comprehension if they ask
questions about texts, participate in discussions, and apply the skills and
strategies taught to them. However, doing so often requires them to show
their peers they are not strong readers—something they are often not will-
ing to do. When faced with publicly revealing their perceived weaknesses or
silently remaining a struggling reader, many students will often choose to
84 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
“Yeah, like I think I’m a pretty good reader. I read all the time and
get good grades. So there’s not really much more I need to learn, you
know, about how to read. I already know how to read.”
For some students, how they identify as readers does not always align with
how they might be identified or positioned as a result of a reading compre-
hension assessment or what grade level teachers have been told they read
on. This means that students who read below grade level, but self-identify
as good readers, may interact with texts in ways you may not have thought
they were capable of. Conversely, students who read above grade level,
Teaching Literacy to Youth Who Struggle with Academic Literacies 85
but self-identify as poor readers, may fall below your expectations in their
engagements with texts.
Therefore, improving the academic literacies of youth is about more
than selecting quality texts and teaching skills and strategies. While such
things are important, the research done on reading identities reminds us
that how students understand themselves as readers plays a significant role
in their academic development. When students receive instruction that
takes their reading identities into account, the potential exists to change
how they interact with texts, improve their reading comprehension, and
increase their understanding of academic subject matter.
If we want to change how youth engage with texts and develop their aca-
demic literacies, we have to understand and respond to their reading iden-
tities. When we talk about how reading identities can be changed, we do
not mean getting students to conform to our version of what it means to be
a “good” reader. Instead, we mean helping students express their current
understandings of who they are as readers and getting them to imagine how
they would like those identities to shift over time. As a result, we ultimately
leave it up to the students to decide what it means to be a reader, what they
need to do to become the kind of reader they desire, and to communicate to
us how we can support them.
In this section, we provide two approaches teachers can use to work
toward changing students’ reading identities. In the first approach, we focus
on how teachers can understand students’ reading identities and then help
students take control of shaping their reading development. In the second
approach, we share how teachers can make the struggles that any student
has with reading become a normal process that we all experience and can
learn from. Both approaches are suitable for teachers who work with ado-
lescents of any grade and with any subject matter.
have academic reading difficulties have been disempowered and have expe-
rienced reading instruction as something teachers do to them and not with
them.
Doing something to students means making most, if not all, of the
decisions for what skills and strategies they need to learn, how they need
to learn and use them, and what texts they should read. By comparison,
reading instruction that focuses on engaging with students allows them to
provide input on how they would like to improve and is responsive to such
input. Teachers first work to learn how students understand themselves as
readers and how they would like to improve. They then make explicit the
kinds of things students need to know and be able to do with texts that will
allow them to develop as academic readers and make progress toward their
own goals.
The first step is to learn how students identify as readers, how they
would like to improve, and how they might like their existing identities to
change. Teachers can ask students to provide short written responses that
might address questions such as:
understanding.” Nolan’s teacher, Ms. Winters, did not have any problems
with his goals, but they were not the ones she would have identified for him.
She wanted Nolan to work more on sharing his ideas about texts with the
class. However, Ms. Winters did not suggest her ideas to Nolan. Instead she
acknowledged his goals and noted to herself that she would find space to
work on the goals they both had for him.
If a student gets stuck on setting a goal, it is fine to help him or her
think it through. Our suggestion is to start by reviewing how the student
identifies as a reader. For example, look at the student’s response and say
something like, “You say here that you are not a very good reader. How
would you like to describe yourself at the end of this year?” After the stu-
dent has provided a response, follow up by asking, “What do you think
you might need to do to get where you want to be?” or provide suggestions
if necessary.
Teachers can ask students to share how they describe themselves as
readers and/or how they want to improve over the year. Such discussions
can be especially important for youth who have experienced regular dif-
ficulties with reading academic texts, as they will have the opportunity to
hear that everyone can improve as readers. Sharing can expose students to
new ways of thinking about reading and help them see that they are not
alone in their desire to improve. However, participation in such a discus-
sion should be voluntary and should be limited to sharing only what each
student is comfortable with. Not all students will feel safe in sharing their
goals or descriptions of themselves as readers in front of their peers, and
this decision needs to be respected.
The next step is to create instruction that addresses the goals students
have for themselves and also the ones you have for them. First, review stu-
dents’ goals and look for commonalities such as improving vocabulary or
learning how to respond to comprehension difficulties. During instruction,
make connections between how you are helping students work toward
achieving their goals while also providing them with new ways to think
about how they engage with texts.
For example, Ms. Winters knew that most of her students were inter-
ested in improving their vocabulary and/or comprehending difficult books.
One day, she assigned them O. Henry’s The Ransom of Red Chief. She
asked students to identify words they did not understand as they began
their initial read of the story for discussion later. Ms. Winters explained to
her students why she wanted them to pay attention to the vocabulary by
saying:
“Why am I asking you to pick out words you don’t know? A lot of you
have said that you want to improve your vocabulary. One way to do
that is to pay attention to words that don’t make sense and then discuss
them and learn what they mean. But a lot of you also want to learn
88 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
how to read more challenging stories, and I think this story is pretty
challenging. The character in the story likes to use all these big words
but doesn’t necessarily use them correctly. So paying attention to the
words that get used, how they are used, and what they actually mean
will help you get better at understanding stories that are a bit more
complex.”
In the above example, Ms. Winters bridged students’ beliefs about what they
needed to work on with what she wanted to teach. While she explained that
she wanted to help expand students’ vocabulary, she also explained that she
wanted her students to read and discuss elements of a short story. Learn-
ing how short stories worked was never something her students expressed
interest in. However, it was an important part of the English curriculum in
eighth grade.
Students generally responded positively to the instruction they received.
Sylvia explained, “Ms. Winters helps me get better at reading because she
listens to what I ask for help on.” Antony said, “I have a lot to learn, and
I know some of what I need. But [Ms. Winters] knows a lot and what she
says helps me. It helps me learn things I didn’t know I needed to learn.”
As a result, both Ms. Winters and the students were able to have col-
laborative discussions about reading development, what texts should be
read, and the different ways one could engage with them. Ultimately, Ms.
Winters saw benefits to the instruction as well, explaining:
“The reading in this class just really took off, and it’s carried over into
other classes that you don’t get to see. Like Mr. Sampson, the science
teacher, told me that the kids are asking him for more time to read in
his class and they want harder things to read! It’s like they took this
idea that they could have a say in their own development and really ran
with it. It’s been amazing.”
Celebrating Struggles
Too often, struggling to understand texts or being labeled a struggling
reader is viewed as something shameful. Students experience school as a
place where finding the “right” answers in texts is celebrated and being
confused, or wrong, or having a radically different interpretation is seen
as a problem. While there are concrete, correct facts found within texts,
many of the more complex ideas are often open to constant analysis and
reinterpretation. When students are asked to answer questions and discuss
texts, they are often expected to identify their teachers’ interpretation of
those texts (O’Flahavan & Wallis, 2005). When students repeatedly fail to
identify their teachers’ interpretations, they often get the message that they
are not good readers and stop participating.
Teaching Literacy to Youth Who Struggle with Academic Literacies 89
Mrs. Johnson next asked students to raise their hands if they had expe-
rienced difficulties while reading it. Sixteen of the 17 students in her class
raised their hands, along with Mrs. Johnson. The students expressed sur-
prise that Mrs. Johnson would have problems with the text. One exclaimed,
“But you’re the teacher!”
Mrs. Johnson then gave the class two more articles to read. One was
about video gamesand the second was about a popular entertainer. The stu-
dents agreed that both articles were easier to understand when compared
to the medical article.
Following these experiences, the students brainstormed reasons people
might have difficulties with understanding texts, including lack of back-
ground knowledge and reading about topics that they are disinterested in.
Mrs. Johnson was then able to discuss with the class how everyone strug-
gles with reading texts at some point, even the teacher. She also expressed
how amazed she was at how willing the students were to share the struggles
they experienced:
Once students have gotten comfortable sharing and discussing their dif-
ficulties, the next step is to work toward solving them as they read. As
students identify areas of confusion, they can document how they tried to
address them. For example, did they reread the passage? Did they look up
a word in the dictionary? Or was the section so difficult they just didn’t
know how to tackle it?
Students should also evaluate their level of understanding after attempt-
ing to address a difficulty or question. They can note what they learned
when they responded to their struggles, or if nothing changed about what
they knew. However, students should know it is also acceptable if they did
not know how to approach a problem or were unable to resolve it, as this is
also a normal part of reading.
Next, have students share how they worked toward solving their prob-
lems, what they learned, and where they would like more help when read-
ing texts in the future. If they did not solve a problem, they can share what
they did and other students can offer suggestions. The emphasis is placed
on processes for resolving comprehension difficulties and learning new
ways of perceiving them. As students present the questions and confusions
they had, discussion can start about how others interpreted the same sec-
tion and how they arrived at their conclusions. As a result, students stand
Teaching Literacy to Youth Who Struggle with Academic Literacies 91
to learn more about a text and will gain new ideas for solving future issues
and questions.
When having students discuss their difficulties, we suggest asking
them how they responded to their struggles and not how they attempted to
fix them. This is a subtle, but we believe important, language shift. Asking
students how they tried to “fix” their comprehension problems places the
emphasis on finding a solution. We want students to focus being comfort-
able with having difficulties and open to multiple ways to approach them.
Teachers can also emphasize that sometimes our attempts to understand do
not end in success or result in finding a clear answer, and this is normal.
Finally, teachers should be careful not to force participation, particularly in
the beginning. Students who have a long history of reading difficulties may
not feel comfortable openly discussing them. Over time, and as they see
they are not alone in their struggles, their participation will likely increase.
Students can also discuss questions they have about texts and how they
attempted to resolve their issues through small-group discussions. Small-
group discussions have a benefit over whole-class discussions in that they
can allow students to form bonds and begin to feel safe in sharing the
struggles they have with reading. Such discussions can focus both on the
content of what was read as well as the difficulties students encountered
while reading.
A central aspect of small-group work is keeping the groups as con-
stant as possible. For groups to form bonds, and for members to take risks,
they need to meet on a regular basis (once or more each week) and retain
membership. If possible, forms groups based on a shared interest or goal to
create an initial basis for bonding.
In preparing students for small groups, it is helpful to suggest ways
students might approach discussing their readings. For example, in reading
a text, teachers can ask students to do the following:
The idea is to have students talking about content, places they were con-
fused about, and ways they approached solving comprehension problems in
a flowing manner as opposed to a disjointed discussion in which students
first talk about problems, then content, and so on.
Students who have academic reading difficulties have expressed how
helpful sharing their challenges in a small group can be (Hall, 2012b). For
example, Mason explained, “I didn’t even know other people had problems
92 VALUING ADOLESCENCE
like me or that I could help them.” Sophia said, “It was good being able
to help someone learn something about what we read in here. It was like,
yeah, I’m helping someone get better.” Finally Nate said, “We get to talk
about the stuff, which is fun because it helps me learn. Like when someone
tells me what they thought about it I think, ‘Oh! I never knew that,’ and
that is cool. Everyone helps each other.”
Conclusion
engage in both inside and outside of class. Schedule a time to meet with
each student individually to discuss the survey and allow them to elaborate
on their answers. Think about how their perceptions of themselves chal-
lenge your own and how you can use this information to help modify your
instruction.
3. With your students, construct a list of possible reading and writing goals
that would be realistic to achieve during the school year. Talk about your
goals for them as their teacher and how they may be different, but no more
important, than the goals they may have for themselves. Once students have
identified two to three goals, help them develop a plan that will help them
succeed in reaching the goals. Encourage students to discuss with their peers
strategies they will need to complete their plan and to give advice on how to
help one another achieve their goals throughout the school year.
4. Hold a class forum to elicit student feedback on the climate of your class-
room. Do students feel safe to share their questions, opinions, and concerns
with you and their classmates? Do all students seem to have a voice during
class discussions? Is the environment conducive to working in partnerships
and small groups, as well as a whole class? Use student input to develop a
plan to create, foster, or improve the cooperative and supportive climate of
your classroom so that all students feel secure in participating.
References
developing
literacy strategies
cHaPter 6
text complexity
and deliberate Practice
Common Cores of Learning
Kristen A. Munger
Maria S. Murray
The most recent results from Reading Today’s annual “What’s Hot, What’s
Not” literacy survey (Cassidy & Grote-Garcia, 2012) indicate that for
2013, adolescent literacy is considered an “extremely hot” topic, and both
text complexity and the Common Core State Standards are rated in the
“very hot” category. Because this chapter covers all three of these hot top-
ics, it is especially relevant to educators seeking to integrate them into their
teaching practices.
BacKground inFormation
The Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy
in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects (CCSS; National
99
100 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
And it is not just educators who are keeping an eye on “the Standards.” Joel
Stein, the Time magazine columnist, has forecasted the death of fictional
texts in favor of informational texts (Stein, 2012), based on recommenda-
tions of the CCSS. His prophesy carries its own irony, given that his col-
umn is regularly assigned by English teachers as nonfiction reading.
Although the CCSS document still encourages the use of narrative
fiction, it stipulates that educators must increase the use of informational
texts as well:
But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the
same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism,
it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to
provide new Guards for their future security.
Text Complexity and Deliberate Practice 101
The CCSS feature three equally important components for measuring text
complexity. These are quantitative measures, qualitative measures, and
reader and task considerations. Figure 6.1 illustrates the CCSS model of
text complexity, using a triangular framework. What follows are descrip-
tions of each of these components, as well as examples of how teachers can
integrate the components into their practice.
Quantitative Measures
Standard 10 of the CCSS specifies that students should read and understand
texts that gradually increase in complexity from grade to grade in a “stair-
case” fashion (NGA & CCSSO, 2010c). But how can teachers determine
the complexity of texts or whether a sequence of texts is actually advancing
in complexity? One way is to use quantitative measurement tools. Quanti-
tative tools gauge the readability of texts based on formulas including word
repetition, word and sentence length, vocabulary, and syntax.
Although measuring text complexity is not new (see Mesmer,
102 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
Qu
ive an
litat tiv
tita
a
Qu e
Reader and Task
FIGURE 6.1. CCSS model of text complexity. Copyright 2010. National Gov-
ernors Association Center for Best Practices and Council of Chief State School
Officers, Washington, DC. All rights reserved.
Common Degrees
Core of Reading Flesch- The Lexile Reading
Band ATOS Power® Kincaid® Framework® Maturity SourceRater
2nd–3rd 2.75–5.14 42–54 1.98–5.34 420–820 3.53–6.13 0.05–2.48
4th–5th 4.97–7.03 52–60 4.51–7.73 740–1010 5.42–7.92 0.84–5.75
6th–8th 7.00–9.98 57–67 6.51–10.34 925–1185 7.04–9.57 4.11–10.66
9th–10th 9.67–12.01 62–72 8.32–12.12 1050–1335 8.41–10.81 9.02–13.93
11th–CCR 11.20–14.10 67–74 10.34–14.2 1185–1385 9.57–12.00 12.30–14.50
FIGURE 6.2. CCSS grade-level bands associated with quantitative measures of text
complexity. Copyright 2010. National Governors Association Center for Best Prac-
tices and Council of Chief State School Officers, Washington, DC. All rights reserved.
be used not only to select texts based on a reader’s present level of ability
but also to select texts that increase in complexity (see Table 6.1 for links
to text complexity resources). Websites such as The Lexile Framework for
Reading (MetaMetrics, 2013) provide tools to search for books at a stu-
dent’s estimated reading level, estimate a specific text’s level of difficulty,
and monitor a student’s progress by recording each Lexile level of texts he/
she reads.
Although quantitative measures are useful when evaluating the com-
plexity of most texts, as mentioned previously, they have been criticized for
their inaccurate leveling of complex narrative fiction (see NGA & CCSSO,
2010b). A good example of inaccurate leveling is featured in the CCSS’s
Appendix A. The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck (1939), is a popular
book assigned in American high schools. Using only quantitative measures,
the text appears appropriate for second- and third-grade students because
of the relative simplicity of the words in the text’s dialogue (the text’s esti-
mated Lexile level is 680). It is only when additional qualitative elements
are considered, such as the maturity of the dialogue, that the text’s true
complexity is better understood. It is likely that teachers already know not
to assign The Grapes of Wrath to second-grade students, but this example
shows what can go wrong if only quantitative measures are used, especially
for texts that are less well known. There is also the danger that because
quantitative tools yield numbers, they may appear to have greater precision
than they actually do (Nesi, 2012).
An additional concern is that certain texts may be offered or denied to
students based on quantitative measures alone since they are both widely
available and efficient to use. Directing a student away from a text because
it appears to be at too high a level, in spite of a student’s interest, extensive
background knowledge, or high level of motivation to read it, is a potential
104 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
Qualitative Measures
Limitations in quantitative measures require the use of other tools, such
as qualitative measures, when making decisions about texts. The CCSS
feature four domains involved in the qualitative evaluation of texts (see
Table 6.2): levels of meaning, text structure, language conventionality/clar-
ity, and knowledge demands. Table 6.1 provides links to CCSS rubrics used
in the qualitative evaluation of both narrative and informational texts.
The CCSS’s Appendix A (NGA & CCSSO, 2010b) features a clear
example of how qualitative measures can be used to examine the com-
plexity of The Grapes of Wrath. Recall that the text’s Lexile level is quite
low—around 680—which falls within the second- to third-grade band of
Reader and task Questions for professional reflection on reader and task
considerations considerations: http://programs.ccsso.org/projects/
common%20core%20resources/documents/Reader%20
and%20Task%20Considerations.pdf
Text Complexity and Deliberate Practice 105
Structure
The text is very simple in its structure, follows the conventional framework of
most narrative fiction, and presents key events in chronological order.
Knowledge demands
A certain degree of knowledge is assumed on the part of the reader, for example,
that there was a period in history called the “Great Depression.”
Deliberate Practice
framework. They made the point that students spend 13 years in class-
rooms with daily practice reading texts. In spite of this, many students
are still not prepared to read and understand the texts used in college and
career settings. What could be missing? Using the CCSS and a deliberate
practice framework, we will generate possible answers to this question.
Previously
acquired
abilities
Deliberate
practice
Steady Immediate,
progression valid
of difficulty feedback
the highly sophisticated strategies that skilled readers regularly use. Just as
the expert tennis player progresses from focusing on the ball to automati-
cally focusing on body cues, less experienced readers require practice in
a wider variety of skills before successfully integrating them to read and
understand complex texts.
Whereas proficient readers have read more and have read often,
advanced readers have not only read even more and more often, but they
also have deliberately engaged in reading texts that are challenging to them.
Expert readers do not merely assimilate ideas from various texts but inte-
grate new and sophisticated ideas. Working toward this apex of inference is
not only consistent with the spirit of the CCSS but is probably only achiev-
able within a framework that includes reading increasingly complex texts.
The student who loves reading “Captain Underpants” but who is never
forced to move beyond that material has done nothing to prepare for a
life of active, intelligent, inquisitive citizenship (which is something train-
ing in the humanities ought to prepare us for) and has been poorly served
by her educators. It sounds as though teachers such as Ms. McNeill are
presenting reading to students as a hobby, not an academic discipline.
(para. 2–3)
Text Complexity and Deliberate Practice 111
This does not mean that all texts should be teacher assigned or even
incrementally challenging. Clearly, a combination of reading experiences
is needed to simultaneously promote students’ engagement in purely enjoy-
able reading activities, along with reading experiences that promote the
thinking skills required for texts encountered in college and career settings.
A persistent challenge educators may face in trying to meet these goals is
students’ resistance to reading texts that seem less enjoyable and are more
difficult to read. For this reason, it makes sense to share with students why
they are being challenged. This can be done by using analogies, such as the
one provided below, to show how learning can be weakened when chal-
lenges are avoided.
As illustrated by Colvin (2008), simply doing an activity over and over
will not lead to any extraordinary improvement. For example, he points out
that even if we have spent thousands of hours driving a car, driving experi-
ence does not automatically lead to our becoming expert drivers. In fact,
our driving probably improved only toward the beginning, and additional
hours of driving do not lead us anywhere beyond basic proficiency. Col-
vin describes the three stages that most drivers experience, and pins down
when progress stops:
The first stage demands a lot of attention as we try out the controls,
learn the rules of driving, and so on. In the second stage we begin to
coordinate our knowledge, linking movements together and more fluidly
combining our actions with our knowledge of the car, the situation, and
the rules. In the third stage we drive the car with barely a thought. It’s
automatic. And with that our improvement at driving slows dramati-
cally, eventually stopping completely. (p. 82)
to improve skills and that not all of these challenges will be enjoyable.
People training to run a marathon do not run steeper and steeper hills
because it feels particularly good; they do it because they want to reach
a goal, and they know that making progress toward that goal requires a
sustained effort.
On occasion, adolescents may prove to be unwilling to read much of
anything without a great deal of prodding on the part of their teachers,
causing some teachers to use what we recognize as extreme scaffolding
to support or motivate their students. This is most likely to happen when
levels of texts are far above students’ reading abilities or when students’
motivation is low. It is important to keep in mind that heavily scaffold-
ing all tasks to motivate students will not necessarily result in the gains
specified by the CCSS. Teachers who assign more difficult texts but then
incorporate so many supports that the texts are no longer challenging is
akin to carrying students up the text complexity staircase. Yes, students are
exposed to more complex texts, but they are not doing much of the work,
and ultimately they end up no better conditioned to climb the staircase
independently.
In a book titled Never Work Harder Than Your Students, Robyn Jack-
son (2009) discusses her Herculean efforts to get students to learn, as she
scrambled for countless hours to motivate and engage them. She finally
realized that most of the time she was working much harder than they
were, with little return on her investment. Teachers who work harder, while
their students do less, are unlikely to see advancements in their students’
abilities. Starting with easy or heavily scaffolded tasks might be a good ini-
tial strategy to promote engagement, but ultimately, high levels of learning
require a deliberate and sustained effort on the part of students, not just
teachers.
Just as marathon runners map out their practice activities related to
their running goals, teachers and students can use measurement tools to
map out practice activities related to reading goals. Engaging students in
reading more challenging texts, while still allowing self-chosen reading so
that students continue to read a lot, will lead to movement up the staircase
of complexity and improve students’ ability to read difficult texts inde-
pendently. Using measurement tools can ensure that the complexity of a
chosen text is consistent with the goals for reading it. For example, Stenner
et al. (2009) specifically discuss using the Lexile framework to increase and
design reading opportunities for students, in which readers’ abilities and
text difficulties can be considered on the same scale. To challenge readers,
they recommend using texts with a Lexile level 100 or more points above
students’ reading level. To improve fluency, they recommend a Lexile level
250 points below students’ reading level (although more research is needed
investigate the use of quantitative measures in this way).
Text Complexity and Deliberate Practice 113
Conclusion
1. Using the links in Table 6.1, determine the quantitative and qualitative levels
of two texts you might use in your classroom. Next, compose a list of reader
and task considerations for these two texts. With whom would you use these
texts? What supports would you provide? With whom would you not use
these texts, and why?
2. Discuss with others a set of skills you have acquired in sports, music,
Text Complexity and Deliberate Practice 117
languages, or another area. Think back to what it took for you to achieve
these skills. How did your coach or teacher consider your previously
acquired abilities? How did he or she advance your skills by steadily mak-
ing your lessons or practice sessions more difficult? How did your coach or
teacher provide real-time, corrective feedback to you, so that you were able
to efficiently advance your skills?
3. Now consider what it will take for your students to be able to become good
readers and comprehenders of complex texts. In addition to “more reading
time,” discuss other strategies you can use to engage students in successfully
reading and understanding challenging texts. Consider the three CCSS mea-
sures of text complexity, the three aspects of deliberate practice discussed
in this chapter, and any other possible influences related to motivation or
determination.
4. The adoption of the CCSS is being implemented quickly. What kind of sup-
ports and scaffolds do you need, not only to learn the standards but to pre-
pare your students to successfully read and understand challenging texts?
Use the deliberate practice framework to discuss practice opportunities you
need to help you advance along the novice-to-expert continuum.
References
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reveals about college readiness in reading. Iowa City, IA: Author.
Cassidy, J., & Grote-Garcia, S. (2012, August/September). Defining the lit-
eracy agenda: Results of the 2013 What’s Hot, What’s Not literacy survey.
Reading Today, 30, 9–12.
Colvin, G. (2008). Talent is overrated: What really separates world-class per-
formers from everybody else. New York: Penguin.
The Declaration of Independence (n.d.). Retrieved from www.archives.gov/
exhibits/-charters/declaration_transcript.html.
Ericsson, K. A. (2004). Deliberate practice and the acquisition and mainte-
nance of expert performance in medicine and related domains. Academic
Medicine, 79(10), 70–81.
Ericsson, K. A., Krampe, R., & Tesch-Römer, C. (1993). The role of deliberate
practice in the acquisition of expert performance. Psychological Review,
100(3), 363–406.
Ericsson, K. A., Nandagopal, K., & Roring, R. W. (2009). Toward a science
of exceptional achievement: Attaining superior performance through
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199–217.
Gladwell, M. (2008). Outliers: The story of success. New York: Little, Brown.
Goatley, V. (2012). Slicing and dicing the ELA Common Core Standards. Prin-
cipal, 92, 16–21. Retrieved from www.naesp.org/sites/default/files/Goat-
ley_ SO12.pdf.
Hiebert, E. H. (2012). The text complexity multi-index (Text Matters series).
118 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/31/where-does-a-love-of-
reading-come-from.
Shanahan, T., Fisher, D., & Frey, N. (2012). The challenge of challenging text.
Educational Leadership. 69(6), 58–62.
Stein, J. (2012, December 10). How I replaced Shakespeare. Time. Retrieved
from www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2130408,00.html.
Stenner, A. J., Koons, H. H., & Swartz, C. W. (2009). Text complexity, the
text complexity continuum, and developing expertise in reading. Dur-
ham, NC: MetaMetrics.
Steinbeck, J. (1939). The grapes of wrath. New York: Viking.
Szymusiak, K., & Sibberson, F. (2001). Beyond leveled texts. Portland, ME:
Stenhouse.
Wolk, R. (2012, December 14). Common Core vs. common sense. Education
Week. Retrieved from www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2012/12/05/13wolk_
ep.h32.html.
Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psycho-
logical processes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
cHaPter 7
Karen Bromley
Of course, it is more than the words that make reading difficult for some
students. A reader’s ability to comprehend text is also related to the text’s
sentence structure, coherence, organization, and background knowledge
(Shanahan et al., 2012). But the words an author uses can cause many
middle school students to stumble as they read conceptually dense subject
area material. This chapter discusses:
There are alarming numbers of secondary school students today who can’t
read well enough to be successful. They struggle with making sense out
of print. They disrupt. They clown around. They withdraw. They fake it.
They fail and drop out. There are also many resistant older readers who
can read but choose not to engage with subject-area materials (Lenters,
2006). Both struggling and resistant readers often lack interest in topics
and genres used in school. They reject school assignments that aren’t mean-
ingful or relevant to them. These students need choices, not only in topics,
120
Active Engagement with Words 121
texts, and assignments, but also in how they learn new words. They need
direct instruction and active involvement in strategies they can adopt and
use independently. Middle school teachers need to be intentional about
vocabulary instruction and use a variety of strategies in order to develop
engaged and successful readers (Bromley, 2007).
Usually the most troublesome words for students are domain specific and
central to building knowledge and conceptual understanding in science,
history, and math. These domain-specific words are the most difficult of
three following types of words (Beck, McKeown, & Kucan, 2008):
Of course, both Tier Two and Three words can be multisyllabic and
cause problems for many adolescent readers. Tier One words are often one-
syllable words and don’t usually present adolescents with trouble.
Many factors affect word learning, including schema, facility with the
English language, availability of supportive models, mentors and coaches,
socioeconomic status, wide reading, and the purpose and relevance of
learning words (Bromley, 2012; see Figure 7.1). Some words are learned as
a result of vicarious experiences when students encounter them in casual
ways, such as in a conversation or during reading when a term like soul
patch is used and students discover it is “a small tuft of hair growing below
a man’s lower lip.” Some words are learned as a result of direct experi-
ences, such as when students visit a blog online and discover it is a “web
log or diary written by an individual” (omit the w, e, and space between
b and l). Other words are learned as a result of direct instruction in the
word’s meaning and orthography. For example, when students are taught
that metamorphosis is a noun that comes from two Greek roots, meta
(new) and morph (to transform) they learn that the word describes what
Active Engagement with Words 123
occurs when a caterpillar hardens into a chrysalis and changes into a but-
terfly. As well, metamorphosis is related to other words like meta-analysis
and endomorph.
While students may learn words as they listen, read, take part in class
discussions, keep vocabulary notebooks, use word walls, and consult dic-
tionaries and thesauruses, direct instruction is a key component for learn-
ing domain-specific Tier Two and Tier Three words. Both types of words
are multisyllabic and need more direct, in-depth instruction in order for
students to learn them than do Tier One words. Tier Three words are more
difficult than Tier Two words because students often lack prior knowledge/
schemas for them, and Tier Three words are also more conceptually dense
than Tier Two words.
Teachers who provide direct instruction understand that learning a
word occurs in both linguistic and nonlinguistic ways (Paivio, 1990). They
teach the linguistic elements of a word (spelling, pronunciation, graphics,
meaning, and grammatical function) and reinforce this with the nonlin-
guistic elements of a word (a visual, auditory, or other sensory image that
connects to the word). Teachers who practice sound vocabulary instruction
don’t just assign, define, and test students on new words. They teach words
in a meaningful context, associate new words with related words, repeat
new words often, and offer opportunities for active engagement with words
(Bromley, 2012; Stahl, 1986).
124 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
Once students have seen you model these strategies a few times for
them, it’s time to ask students to talk about the strategies they use to ana-
lyze and learn a new word. Whether students work alone or with peers,
giving them the option to share the metacognitive strategies they use can
improve learning for everyone and be an effective way for others to learn
these strategies. Analyzing new vocabulary, studying difficult words, and
teaching these words to each other is an effective practice because students
use their own words and they often listen better to each other than they do
to their teachers.
Here are five easy strategies for engaging adolescents actively in interac-
tive work with their peers and/or independent work to learn new words.
I have seen these ideas used successfully by middle school teachers with
struggling and resistant readers who have trouble learning domain-specific
vocabulary.
Active Engagement with Words 125
K-W-L
K-W-L (Know, Want to know, Learn) is a prereading strategy designed to
tap students’ prior knowledge and use it in preparation for reading new
material (Ogle, 1986). But K-W-L is also a handy strategy for introducing
new words (Bromley, 2012). When you use K-W-L to introduce vocabulary,
you help students set their own purposes for reading. The strategy allows
students to cooperatively unlock a new word as they take control of their
own learning. For example, you can model K-W-L for students with the
word endangered (See Figure 7.2).
First, have students brainstorm the “K,” or what they think they know
about the word. Have them look at the word and its parts or “chunks” and
make guesses about how the new word connects to something they already
know. Next, move to the “W” and have students think about what they
want to know about the word. At this point, you can introduce the word
by pronouncing it, giving its meaning, and praising any of the “K” or “W”
statements that reveal part or all of the word’s pronunciation or meaning.
You can also wait until students have read the material that contains the
word. Then students can contribute the “L,” or what they learned about
the word from their reading.
One advantage of K-W-L is that it helps students access information
they already have, and it helps them use this prior knowledge as a bridge to
learning something new. Second, K-W-L is an easy to remember acronym
that students can adopt and then use independently. Third, K-W-L puts
learning squarely in the hands of students; thus they have a purpose for
figuring out meaning and pronunciation of new words.
Teach–Teach–Trade
Teach–Teach–Trade is a strategy I observed in a seventh-grade biology
class where Katie, a special education teacher, was co-teaching with her
• Identify important words from what students have just read. (Be
sure to find one word for each student.)
• Write each word on a separate 5″ x 8″ card or half sheet of paper and
have each student choose a card.
• On the front of the card, have students define the word and draw
a picture to represent the word (and write the word again). On the
back of the card have them use the word in one or two sentences (see
Figure 7.3). (Encourage students to use references like their texts,
the glossary, and/or notebooks.)
• (Check each card for accuracy and have students redo their work if
the card includes inaccuracies.)
• Partner students and have them teach each other their word (by
reading the word, definition, and sentence to the partner).
• Have students trade cards, find a new partner, and teach the new
word to another person (or have students continue teaching the
same word to others).
• Continue Teach–Teach–Trade until each student has taught a new
word to everyone in class (or if time is an issue, stop part way
through and have each student teach their word to the class).
A Word a Day
A Word a Day (AWAD; www.wordsmith.org/words) sends a daily e-mail
to subscribers with a new word appropriate for middle school and high
school students (Bromley, 2012). AWAD includes a vocabulary word, its
definition, and pronunciation information including an audio clip, etymol-
ogy, a usage example, an example of the word used in a sentence, and other
128 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
interesting tidbits. Each week there is a different theme, and each daily
word fits that theme.
Students can learn much about words independently when they sub-
scribe to this website. Or you can subscribe and share a word a day on a
bulletin board or a special AWAD chart. Recently, when the theme was
toponyms and eponyms, I learned: “They are words derived from places
or people, real and fictional, from history and mythology. They are known
as toponyms and eponyms, from Greek topo- (place) + -onym (name), and
epi- (upon) + -onym (name). This week we’ll see five words coined after the
names of people and places.”
The first word posted on Monday as part of that theme was serendip-
ity. It is a Tier Three word worth teaching to middle grade students. It is
“a term used by scientists when they make an accidental discovery leading
to something important.” For example, in an explanation of serendipity on
Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.com), the story of Newton’s theory of gravity
is attributed to the serendipitous event he witnessed as he sat under an apple
tree and saw an apple fall straight to the ground.
You can use the information from AWAD to deepen students’ under-
standing of these words. For example, you can tell students that serendip-
ity is pronounced ser-uhn-DIP-i-tee and it means “The faculty of making
fortunate discoveries by chance.” AWAD reports that serendipity comes
from the fairy tale “The Three Princes of Serendip,” in which the princes
supposedly made happy discoveries they were not looking for. The word’s
origin is from Persian sarandip (Sri Lanka) and from Arabic sarandib, and
it was first used in 1754.
Within the AWAD website, students can also explore a word like seren-
dipity by clicking on a visual thesaurus embedded there. This visual display
of synonyms can make word meanings easier to remember than some of the
etymology information. For example, students can see a “Think Map” or
graphic there that shows serendipity related to “good luck,” “fluke,” and
“good fortune.” This visual display lets students explore the connections
among words and their relationships to each other. Reproducing a concept
map or visual web (see Figure 7.4) with synonyms and discussing the map
with students is an excellent way to reinforce the word and its meanings
visually and orally. You might also have several students research the word
and share other examples of serendipitous findings in science.
Or you can combine AWAD with K-W-L to help students learn the
word. For example, in a K column on the K-W-L chart, a student might
notice that seren- looks like serene and identify it as meaning “calm” or
“placid.” Another student might note that the first part of the word is
spelled almost like siren. While these connections may or may not be fruit-
ful in learning the meaning of serendipity, they provide an opportunity for
Active Engagement with Words 129
serendipity
good
luck fluke
good fortune
happy accident
students to tap their prior knowledge, and these connections also give you
a way to teach or reinforce some Tier Two words.
One advantage of having students subscribe individually to AWAD,
or using it yourself as a teacher, is that students typically are introduced
to multisyllabic words. Second, these are the words that are difficult for
struggling and resistant readers because the words often include Greek or
Latin roots. In fact, the vocabulary in science, social studies, and math in
most middle school text books and other assigned reading often contains
Greek or Latin roots. The many multisyllabic technical terms found in this
reading makes content-area learning difficult.
All sorts of interesting word knowledge are available from AWAD
(Bromley, 2012). Recently, when “text messaging” was a theme, I learned
that this kind of language is not a new phenomenon. Hundreds of years ago,
English poets such as Charles Bombaugh used numbers and the sounds of
letters to represent words. In 1867, 130 years before mobile phone messag-
ing, Bombaugh used the phrases in one of his poems, “I wrote 2 U B 4” and
“He says he loves U 2 X S/U R virtuous and Y’s.” (“He says he loves you to
excess. You are virtuous and wise.”)
Root Words
We do not always do a good job of teaching middle school students about
the roots of English. It may be that middle school teachers believe students
learned about these roots in elementary school. Or some middle school
teachers may teach vocabulary by giving students definitions, rather than
attending to deep conceptual meanings, building students’ independent
word learning skills, and teaching them about roots. At any rate, “Middle
school students have much yet to learn about the structure of words” (Ivey
130 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
& Broaddus, 2000, p. 74). And creating visual displays of related words
with similar roots can help build students’ vocabularies through associa-
tions.
Because a good portion of the English language has Greek and Latin
origins, it is essential to familiarize struggling and resistant readers with
the spelling and meanings of some of the most often appearing roots and
affixes (Figure 7.5) (Bromley, 2012). In fact, students can infer meanings of
60% of the multisyllabic words they meet by analyzing word parts (Nagy
& Anderson, 1984). So knowing the meaning of a prefix, suffix, or root
makes it easier to figure out the meanings of other words that contain those
roots. Here are some ideas for teaching Greek and Latin roots:
words. For example, audi- means “hear,” so students can infer the
meanings for audible, auditorium, and audience.
• Give students a number of words with the same root (e.g., -rupt),
and the meaning “to break.” Then have them extend this knowledge
and figure out the meanings of disrupt (to break apart), interrupt
(to insert words between someone’s words; inter- means “between
or among”), disruption (a noun since -ion is added), eruption (to
blow up).
• For Bell Work, which is a brief activity students engage in when the
bell rings to begin class (Moore & Hinchman, 2006), put two or
three multisyllabic words on the board. Words can be real (e.g., pho-
tosynthesis or hypotenuse), or nonsense words you and/or student(s)
make up (e.g., pyrgamy, contrapent, tetrathan). Then have students
form pairs to determine each word’s meaning by analyzing its mor-
phemes.
• Create a Word Wall in your classroom to reinforce learning roots
and derivatives. List word parts alphabetically, or draw a graphic
organizer like a Root Word Web using a root vegetable such as a
carrot with leaves (see Figure 7.6). Then invite students to add other
words that contain that root. When everyone contributes, students
can see how many other related words they can now infer meanings
for.
destruction
destruct instruction
instruct
reconstruction
structure construction
struct
(build)
Teaching these Greek and Latin word parts, how to spell them, pronounce
them, and what they mean can reap huge rewards in the number of Tier
Two and Tier Three words struggling and resistant readers understand
independently. Remember, the linguistic and nonlinguistic aspects of words
including graphics and visual pictures often help cement these words and
their roots in students’ memories.
Digital Words
The CCSS (NGA & CCSSO, 2010) and the International Reading Asso-
ciation’s (IRA) position statement Integrating Literacy and Technology
in the Curriculum (IRA, 2012) suggest that full literacy in today’s world
includes proficiency in technology use. Technology and the digital world
often appeal to unmotivated students who are disengaged from learning.
Making meaning by combining visual and verbal modes through tech-
nology is termed multimodality. In fact, we are told that “many literacy
educators have tapped multimodality because it often recasts students who
are labeled ‘at risk . . . as students ‘of promise’ ” (Siegel, 2012, p. 674). So
there is a strong rationale for using multimodal practices in teaching. Some
examples follow:
• Have students use PowerPoint to create slides that depict new words.
Then they can teach classmates the meaning and pronunciation of
a word like economy (see Figure 7.7). With PowerPoint, a seventh
grader made the dollar sign pulsate, which gave the slide a 3-D qual-
ity.
• Let students visit Wordle (www.wordle.net), where they can cut and
paste or type the text from their content reading to create a “splash”
of words. The most often used words appear largest and may be the
most important to learn. Students can change colors, fonts, styles,
and languages as well as omit common Tier One words.
• Invite partners to collaborate as they use Inspiration (www.inspira-
tion.com) to create an organizer that shows words that contain for
example, the root -tract (see Figure 7.8). Students can use clip art
and an online dictionary before printing their work and sharing it
perhaps in a handout with classmates.
• Pair students to work together to explore multimedia author-
ing tools like Animoto (www.animoto.com) and Glogster (www.
Active engagement with Words 133
retractable =
able to be
pulled back subtraction =
or in taking away
Tractor =
part of
farm
something
machine
used to
pull plows
distract =
attractive to pull
= having tract = to
attention
qualities pull
away
that draw
people
extract =
take out
traction = by force;
intractable =
the grip remove
hard to
of
manage or
something
lead;
moving on
stubborn
a surface
Conclusion
References
comprehension
in secondary schools
douglas Fisher
nancy Frey
This chapter:
• Demonstrate independence.
• Build strong content knowledge.
• Respond to the varying demands of audience, task, purpose, and
discipline.
• Comprehend as well as critique.
137
138 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
• Value evidence.
• Use technology and digital media strategically and capably.
• Come to understand other perspectives and cultures. (p. 7)
Content Is Key
Secondary school students face a challenge the moment they walk into a
typical school: their experiences are unnaturally segmented into silos of
information. Without meaning to, school schedules unintentionally con-
vey a falsehood, namely that learning is neatly divided into finite blocks
of time. Therefore, many students have little experience with applying
their knowledge of history, for instance, when reading a poem in English.
The do not use their scientific knowledge while writing argumentatively.
Comprehension in Secondary Schools 139
FIGURE 8.1. Qualitative measures of text complexity. From Fisher, Frey, and Lapp
(2012, pp. 47–48). Copyright 2012 by the International Reading Association.
Reprinted by permission.
they are first deeply grounded in the text. Table 8.1 provides examples of
text-dependent and text-independent questions for A Quilt of a Country
by Anna Quindlen.
Text-based Discussions
Discussion drives learning in the high school classroom. Long gone are the
days when teaching meant lectures, with little exchange between teacher
and learner. The text-dependent questions developed by the teacher should
not be viewed as homework assignments, but rather as a means to frame
extended discussion in the classroom. Discussion about texts is valued by
adolescents, who recognize it as a pathway to understanding text (Alver-
mann et al., 1996). Discussion can and should also occur among small
groups of students, especially to increase participation and active learning.
144 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
Vocabulary Is Vital
When children are emergent readers in their first years of school, they
learn how to break the code to unlock the printed word. They learn the
44 sounds of the English language, called phonemes, and the alphabetic
principles that represent these sounds on paper, called phonics. In due
time they string the sounds and letters together more fluidly and in a short
time they learn to recognize the code automatically, freeing up attention
to focus on meaning (LaBerge & Samuels, 1974). These early code-based
processes are constrained, in the sense that there is an end point at which
you are finished; in other words, once you know the phonemes and their
representations, you’re done. But comprehension and vocabulary are
unconstrained; that is, we all continue to improve across a lifetime (Paris,
2005).
The evidence of the importance of vocabulary knowledge for com-
prehension is extensive. Vocabulary knowledge is a strong predictor of the
reader’s comprehension abilities (Baumann, Kame’enui, & Ash, 2003). As
well, vocabulary use in text is a good indicator of how difficult a reading
may be (Stahl, 2003). The link is an obvious one. When students under-
stand the terminology of a discipline or topic, they are more likely to under-
stand a reading containing that vocabulary.
The explosion of vocabulary words and phrases accelerates in second-
ary school, and it is essential that students be equipped with the tools they
need to resolve unknown terms without teacher support. Readers frequently
encounter unknown or partially understood vocabulary words and phrases
when reading complex text. But the simplistic advice to skip the confus-
ing portion and hope that the context will give you a clue is inadequate.
After all, how many times can one skip forward before the text is rendered
meaningless? High school students need a multipronged problem-solving
process in order to determine the meaning of unknown words and phrases.
We advocate teaching students how to look inside and outside of confus-
ing words in the text (Fisher & Frey, 2008). This problem-solving process
includes looking inside the word to perform a structural analysis, especially
in noting how affixes, roots, and bases can reveal meaning. Readers and
listeners also look outside the word to consider the contextual clues that
might further corroborate meaning. The third method is to consult outside
resources, especially dictionaries and glossaries, which also provide more
information regarding etymology and usage:
146 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
Modeling
In middle and high school, much of the content is very sophisticated and stu-
dents need to apprentice into the thinking of an expert. Because thinking is
invisible, students need to experience their teachers’ thinking in other ways.
Often this is accomplished as teachers model their thinking during reading.
Essentially, the teacher explains his or her thinking using “I” statements
rather than you directives. For example, rather than saying “First you have
to figure out whether you can make the bases equal. If you can make them
equal, then you know that the exponents can be made equal” a teacher mod-
eling might say, “When I see two bases with exponents equal to each other, I
first ask myself whether I can make the bases equal. I do this because I know
that if the bases are equal, or can be made equal, then the exponents have to
be equal.” In addition, the teacher integrates metacognition into the model-
ing by providing the reasons, rationale, or explanation for the statements.
In essence, the teacher attempts to open up his or her brain and describe
148 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
the processes that are used to complete the task at hand, in this case com-
prehending a complex text. Most modeling events are brief glimpses into
the thinking required to reach understanding. Modeling allows students to
observe the problem-solving process of other human beings.
Close Reading
Close reading is a type of guided instruction in which students explore
a complex and worthy text, mining it for all types of information. Close
readings are done with short passages, either stand-alone texts or strategi-
cally selected sections of a longer text. Typically the students encounter the
text first, with limited frontloading or pretaught vocabulary. That is not to
say that the teacher does not scaffold instruction, but rather that students
meet the text and attempt to make some meaning from it, knowing that
they will return to the text several times. There are several keys to an effec-
tive close reading.
Repeated Reading
Students read the selected text several times, often with different purposes
or to respond to different questions. In some cases, the teacher also reads
the text aloud or students read sections to their peers. Repeated reading
has been an effective way to improve comprehension and close readings are
a way to ensure that students get instructional opportunities to reread for
meaning. In their seminal text, How to Read a Book, Adler and Van Doren
(1940/1972) built a case for engaging in repeated readings with accompa-
nying annotation:
Annotation
Ideally, students write on the text, underlining key points and writing in the
margins. Sometimes this is not practical and students write on bookmarks,
self-sticking notes, or on paper as they read. Annotation helps students pre-
pare for the discussions they have with their peers and to integrate evidence
into their writing. Types of annotation include circling confusing words,
underlining important statements, noting questions and connections, and
enumerating arguments.
Comprehension in Secondary Schools 149
Text-Dependent Questions
As we have noted elsewhere in this chapter, text-dependent questions pro-
vide students an opportunity to cull the text for evidence that supports
their responses. These questions should not be limited to recall questions,
but rather should give the student an opportunity to consider the text from
a number of angles and perspectives. For example, 11th-grade students
might be asked about major themes or central ideas, the structure of spe-
cific parts of the text and how that contributes to the meaning, and how
two different texts treat a theme or topic.
In the same way that the high school curriculum should be integrated to
support cross-disciplinary thinking, so should comprehension instruction.
Reading comprehension isn’t solely about reading; students regularly utilize
speaking and listening, as well as viewing and writing in order to under-
stand text. Consider the literacy demands embedded in these content stan-
dards from California:
• Discuss the human costs of the war [World War II], with particu-
lar attention to the civilian and military losses in Russia, Germany,
Britain, the United States, China, and Japan (California Department
of Education, 2010, History/Social Studies Standard 10.8.6).
• Students know how to analyze published geological hazard maps
of California and how to use the map’s information to identify evi-
dence and geological events of the past and predict geologic changes
in the future (California Department of Education, 1998, Earth Sci-
ence standard 9.d).
• Plan, conduct, and evaluate social, recreational, and educational activ-
ities appropriate to the physical, psychological, cultural, and socio-
economic needs of individuals and families (California Department of
Education, 2006, Career and Technical Education standard D12.3).
support will prove frustrating for everyone. However, modeling one’s think-
ing gives students insight into how an expert (the teacher) makes meaning.
Thoughtfully crafted text-dependent questions offer students a progression
as they move from literal understanding to implicit understanding. Impor-
tantly, the discussions students engage in with their teacher and peers can
be structured such that readers return to the text to locate information and
justify their claims. Their conversations set the stage for writing as they
begin to produce original texts that extend beyond the readings.
Conclusion
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Achieve, Inc. (2012). Closing the expectations gap 2012: An annual 50-state
progress report on the alignment of high school policies with the demands
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Adler, M. J., & Van Doren, C. (1972). How to read a book. New York: Touch-
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tandards.org/the-standards.
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hension. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 8, 317–344.
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from www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2001/09/27/a-quilt-of-a-coun-
try.html.
Shanahan, T., & Shanahan, C. (2008). Teaching disciplinary literacy to ado-
lescents: Rethinking content area literacy. Harvard Educational Review,
78(1), 40–59.
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Comprehension in Secondary Schools 153
Randy Bomer
Michelle Fowler-Amato
This chapter:
154
Expanding Adolescent Writing 155
claims. And sometimes, students may be asked to write, but only about a
text created by someone else—someone who is considered the real writer
in this exchange. So like many writing scholars, we want to argue for the
importance of writing, sometimes even its primacy. And we want to argue,
too, that we should emphasize certain messages about writing over others.
purposes. In other cases, such as when students are writing about shared
content because the focus is an exploration of a text or topic, teachers may
open up student topic choice as much as possible within a set of parameters.
For example, rather than answering a teacher’s questions about a shared
text, students might write to think several times during the reading, then
return to that writing to formulate an assertion they would like to make to
an audience, building upon their own observations, insights, and trails of
thought. The important point is that students can only learn to trust their
own thinking and take on a process of developing content when they actu-
ally have a chance to do so.
to revisit what they have written and to try to rethink—rather than being
asked to produce a final statement in a first draft. Teachers often do this
simply by having a due date for a complete first draft and then scheduling
ample time in class after that date for students to revisit their writing and
ask new questions about it. The important thing, as often as possible, is for
student writers to see writing as something that grows thought, rather than
simply leaps from some genius’s great first ideas.
•• Student/student interviews.
•• Public interviews in which everyone questions a particular writer.
•• Keeping a journal in which we “spy” on ourselves as writers.
•• Focused, ethnographic investigations of one another’s homes, rooms, habits, and
writing conditions.
•• Metaphorical drawings about what writing is like for us.
•• Acting out critical incidents in our writing lives.
•• A letter-writing cycle about life as a writer initiated by the teacher writing about
her or his own life as a writer, with students writing back in dialogue.
•• A timeline of our experiences with writing that have led us to become the writers
we are today.
life, and in sports and other activities. These are the locations of their real
audiences, their collaborators, and their topical variation. The CCSS call
for students to be given opportunities to draw on multiple sources, includ-
ing digital texts, to support their thinking in the writing they do, assessing
the validity of each of these resources (CCRA.W.8), as well as to make use
of technology when composing, publishing, and collaborating with others
throughout the writing process (CCRA.W.6).
Unfortunately, the goals in these standards are not necessarily sup-
ported by the kinds of school experiences that many middle school and
high school students are having. Some research (Applebee & Langer, 2011)
suggests (as does our experience as professionals) that students may experi-
ence few extended writing opportunities even in their language arts classes
(as well as across the disciplines) and rarely share their writing with audi-
ences beyond the classroom community. As we mentioned above, students
are often taught formulaic structures with the goal of preparing them for
standardized tests or for the completion of a writing task that requires a
fixed response. Similarly, the use of technology in the writing classroom is
limited, mostly serving teachers rather than students (Applebee & Langer,
2011). Because students may be learning the most from unofficial locations
outside school, the practices and habits they take on in those settings might
be especially valuable to bring into school, as a foundation for academic
learning. Although academic literacies require different skills and forms of
knowledge than those that young people often call upon when writing for
their own purposes, the motives, processes, and forms of thinking are simi-
lar (Daniels, Zemelman, & Steinecke, 2007). So why not start there? Why
not begin by seeking an understanding of what writing is to them, building
on what they are already doing, in an effort to connect the curriculum to
the lives of the students who are experiencing it?
Writing to Think
school. But many teachers believe that writing to think should serve an even
broader purpose in a literacy curriculum. In addition to having opportuni-
ties to respond to conversation in the classroom, our students should experi-
ence what it is like to attend to their own thinking, becoming aware of the
moments in which they have a thought, using writing as a tool to further
develop the idea while, at the same time, preparing to participate in conver-
sations that take place beyond the walls of the classroom.
Writers’ Notebooks
When students write to think, they are typically talking to themselves
about things that matter to them: their memories, their dreams, their inter-
ests, the people and places that are important to them, and the things they
see and hear that call them to respond. Although this writing could live
anywhere (writers jot down their thinking on napkins, old envelopes, and
paper menus), many teachers find value in the use of a writer’s notebook, a
tool in which ideas take shape, ideas that a writer might eventually return
to when addressing an audience (Bomer, 1995, 2011).
Like a journal, a notebook allows writers to return to and reflect on
their thinking over time. But whereas a journal often consists of a collection
of reflections that stand on their own, a writer’s notebook is a compilation
of entries, each with the potential to be part of a bigger conversation. When
a writer composes a notebook entry, he does so with an understanding that
he is likely to return to this piece of writing, building on his thinking in
future entries and, later, in a piece of writing that speaks to a particular
audience. Or he might find, through the process of writing and reflecting
on his thinking within the notebook, that he is not interested or ready to
take this topic further. In the meantime, this piece will remain inside the
notebook, allowing the writer to return to his thinking in the future, if he
is called to do so.
In addition to serving as a tool that allows writers to collect and docu-
ment their thinking over time, it is our hope that keeping a notebook will
encourage students to change the way they pay attention to the world.
When a writer knows that he will be expected to write regularly in a note-
book, he begins to notice what he sees, hears, feels, and wonders about,
and each of these experiences becomes a possible topic to explore through
writing.
each writer’s independence, yet provide enough support to ensure that each
writer grows as a result of engaging in the process of writing. This support
might be provided through the implementation of mini-lessons as well as
through the conferring that takes place while writers are at work. Early
on, these mini-lessons and conferences are likely to focus on practices and
habits of keeping a notebook, teaching students the purposes of this tool
and thinking with them about how best to set up individual notebooks. It
is important that each writer finds his own notebook to be user friendly,
allowing him to return to previous entries, thereby building on past think-
ing. A teacher might also implement mini-lessons and facilitate conferences
that explore how writers generate ideas and build stamina and concentra-
tion. Similarly, a teacher is likely to design mini-lessons and engage in con-
ferences early in the school year, in an effort to encourage variety within
student writing.
A notebook is a tool in which students experiment with language as
well as with different ways of representing their ideas. In order to encour-
age variety in notebook entries, teachers create space for writers to share
their work as well as their practices and processes, so students have the
opportunity to learn from each other. In Figure 9.2, we include a list of
some of the kinds of entries that we have seen writers try out in their own
notebooks. We share these only to open students’ and teachers’ eyes to
some of the possibilities that might exist within student notebooks, not
as a set curriculum or a complete list. Because writers’ notebooks serve as
self-sponsored tools for thinking, teachers help students by introducing a
variety of strategies that they might call upon, as needed, in an effort to
get their material out of their mind and onto a page, to see what they have
to say. That way, when they make a piece of writing for an audience, it’s
mainly a matter of design.
rather than an authority figure demanding that students write “for me” in
the required way so that their work may be judged.
With those social relations established, the writer’s task is to design
experiences for those readers—to define purposes and agendas toward
those people and to devise a text strategically to achieve those purposes.
Sometimes, the purpose is to share experiences, maybe to let the readers
know what the writer’s life is like and to try to make them care. At other
times, the purpose is to change the reader’s mind, perhaps about a matter
of public policy, a topic of interest in their shared community, or a way of
thinking about a text. In a context in which the writer knows what she is
trying to do to a reader, some of those typical things people remember hear-
ing about from traditional teachers of writing might become useful—ways
of organizing texts, patterns of arrangement that some writers have called
upon, even the way readers might expect sentences to be arranged. All of
these formal considerations get their meanings from the real social interac-
tions into which they fit. Too often, as we discussed above, the meanings
are lost in all of the attention given to the forms themselves—uninspired
formulas or grammatical prescriptions. Instead of focusing on fixed, ready-
made recipes for writing, good writing teachers show students the pro-
cesses writers use to make decisions about structure, about detail, about
supporting claims, about language, and about other features of quality in a
particular form of writing.
strategies from trying them out in practical situations, and every time they
do this, they expand their repertoire of things they know to try in order
to get a text to work for a reader. They pick up ideas from reading experi-
ences, trying in their own writing the designs they notice in other writers’
work. But they only do this because they have developed the eyes of a
craftsperson from their own attempts as writers to make texts do what
they want them to. There is really not much to say to writers before they
start writing. They don’t need lectures or prescriptions; they mainly need
to get to work. So a writing classroom is a place where people work. That
is not to say that there is no role for a teacher, for instruction. Once a
writer is trying to make something she cares about, in order to have an
impact on a particular audience, she will have all kinds of motivation to
learn things that can help her accomplish her purpose. Here, we suggest a
few teaching structures that provide opportunities for writers’ own work
time and also for teachers to influence the choices writers make within
that time.
Whole-Class Mini-Lessons
When students are writing during class and the teacher is conferring with
individuals, it becomes clear to the teacher what kinds of things everyone
in the class could benefit from hearing. These become the topics of mini-
lessons, which are very focused, short lessons for the whole class—maybe 5
to 10 minutes long. Because they are short, many teachers teach a string of
mini-lessons about one idea across several days, perhaps introducing a strat-
egy on one day, demonstrating the next, and then giving students a chance
to try that same strategy on the third day. So if the purpose is to teach stu-
dents to create a sense of place by detailed sensory information, the teacher
introduces the idea and shows an example on the first day, demonstrates it
by revising in front of students on the second day, and asks them to identify
one place or setting in their own piece of writing and try building up the
sensory information on a small sheet of paper on the third day.
Conclusion
1. Make a timeline of your own life history as a writer. Label on it all of the
writing experiences you remember, in and out of school. Be sure to count
the holiday plays you made up with your cousins, the songs you wrote for
girlfriends, the letters to and from your grandfather, the journals, blogs,
and the video you made that one summer. Label these moments on your
timeline: the most helpful thing that ever happened to you, the most hurtful
thing that ever happened, the time in your life when you felt the most like a
writer, and the time in your life when you felt least like a writer.
2. Interview adolescents about the range of composing activities they engage
in throughout their lives. Remember that they may not count lots of things
they do as writing. See if you can help them revalue the composing they
already do as similar in some underlying ways to academic forms of writing.
3. Buy yourself a notebook that seems inviting to you, one that inspires you
to write freely. Spend several weeks writing every day about a range of dif-
ferent things, varying topics as well as forms—just to think through them
and try them out. Then read through your notebook and see what emerges
as possible topics. What single entries draw you? What themes can you see
across your writing? What kind of piece could you make from those entries?
4. Find a short story or essay that you think students could relate to. Identify
five things you could teach from that story about good writing—not punc-
tuation or grammar, but craft, style, invention, and deeper structures. How
could you talk about those things in a way that might make sense to student
writers, so that they could use those strategies in their own work?
References
and teens. Washington, DC: Pew Internet and American Life Project.
Retrieved from www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2008/Writing-Technol-
ogy-and-Teens.aspx.
Murray, D. M. (1985). A writer teaches writing. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
National Governors Association Center for Best Practices & Council of Chief
State School Officers. (2010). The Common Core State Standards. Wash-
ington, DC: Author. Retrieved from www.corestandards.org/ELA-Liter-
acy/CCRA/W.
cHaPter 10
Cynthia Shanahan
This chapter:
We make decisions every day regarding the various aspects of our lives.
Should we go on this diet or that one—or should we adopt more realistic
body images? Is this candidate’s plan for the budget realistic? What will the
consequences of global warming be, and what should we be doing about it?
These decisions are all quite difficult to make because we rely on informa-
tion from multiple viewpoints, in multiple genres (letters, essays, reports,
advertisements, lectures, etc.), and through various venues (newspapers,
television, podcasts, websites, billboards, books, magazines, and so on),
that is often contradictory. The information changes depending on who
said it, when it was said, what evidence was used to support it, and on and
on. There is no one defi nitive answer, yet there may be many messages
169
170 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
credibility and usefulness. Thus for those using the CCSS, teaching will be
focused on reading across multiple texts. For example, a 9-10 ELA “Inte-
gration of Knowledge and Ideas” standard states: Analyze seminal U.S.
documents of historical and literary significance (e.g., Washington’s fare-
well address, the Gettysburg Address, Roosevelt’s “Four Freedoms” speech,
King’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail”), including how they address related
themes and concepts. A History/Social Studies Reading Standard for grades
11–12 says: Evaluate authors’ differing points of view on the same histori-
cal event or issue by assessing the authors’ claims, reasoning, and evidence.
The ability to understand and respond to multiple texts is also a focus
of the assessments that are being developed by the Partnership for Assess-
ment of Readiness for College and Career (PARCC) and Smarter Balance.
For example, one PARCC exercise has students answering questions about
one text, then adds another text and expects students to use information
from the first text to interpret the second. If instruction does not include
multiple text understanding, then states implementing the CCSS will
undoubtedly fall short of helping their students to meet those standards,
and students will be at a disadvantage on assessments of them.
Although we haven’t previously done very much instructionally to
ensure that students read and write multiple texts, there is a research base
supporting such instruction. The research that has been done on multiple-
text reading and writing is synthesized in the next section.
the historians were evaluating the documents for their credibility. They
thought of the documents as arguments for particular interpretations of
history, and they used the credible information to form their own interpre-
tations. The high school students, on the other hand, treated each of the
documents as a separate entity and engaged in fact collection. Wineburg’s
findings have been corroborated by a number of other studies (Britt, Rouet,
& Perfetti, 1996; Perfetti, Britt, Rouet, Mason, & Georgia, 1993; Stahl,
Hynd, Britton, McNish, & Bosquet, 1996; VanSledright & Kelly, 1998).
In the Stahl et al. (1996) study, for example, students did seem to learn the
information in common across the various texts, but there was no indica-
tion that the students were utilizing corroboration—just that they remem-
bered the information that was repeated. They did not seem to notice when
information in the various texts conflicted, and with few exceptions, they
did not seem to engage in sourcing or contextualization. Researchers have
also confirmed that experts in various subject areas, unlike students, do use
information from many sources in learning, critiquing, and applying ideas
in their respective fields (Bazermann, 1988; Shanahan et al., 2011).
Could students learn to engage in the processes the historians used?
Several studies confirm that the answer to that question is yes. Hynd-
Shanahan, Holschuh, and Hubbard (2004) found that college students
not only engaged in sourcing, contextualization, and corroboration when
reading multiple texts, but also changed the way they thought about his-
tory. In thinking about the texts as arguments for historical interpreta-
tion, they ended the study with more sophisticated strategies, more engage-
ment in reading, and a more nuanced and critical view of what it meant
to learn historical information. It is not only college students who can
use those strategies. VanSledright (2002a, 2002b) taught fifth graders to
use historical reasoning to read multiple texts, concluding that the stu-
dents learned “how to make sense of historical documents as evidence,
identify the nature of the documents as sources, judge the reliability and
perspective of those documents, and corroborate details across accounts
in order to construct evidence-based assumptions” (VanSledright, 2002b,
p. 131). Wolfe and Goldman (2005) taught low-performing middle graders
to think across two texts about the fall of the Roman Empire and found
that even these struggling readers could make cross-textual connections,
given easy texts. De La Paz (2005) found that instruction of middle school
students in historical reasoning strategies using multiple texts helped them
to write more accurate and persuasive historical essays than students who
did not have such instruction. Monte-Sano (2011) studied an 11th-grade
history class whose teacher taught them to annotate multiple primary
sources, write about historical perspectives, and synthesize major issues,
with an emphasis on using evidence. She found that students gained skill
in historical reasoning and wrote better essays as a result. Later, Monte-
Sano and De La Paz (2012) gave four document-based writing tasks to
Reading and Writing across Multiple Texts 175
10th- and 11th-grade students on the topic of the Cold War. They asked
some to engage in sourcing, corroboration, and causal analysis before
writing and others to imagine themselves as historical agents. The students
who engaged in sourcing, corroboration, and causal analysis significantly
improved their historical reasoning, whereas students who were asked to
imagine themselves as historical agents, writing in first person, did not
do as well. And Reisman (2012) provided 11th-grade history teachers a
number of “document” lessons they integrated into their regular history
curriculum. She found that students who experienced these multiple docu-
ment lessons did significantly better than those who did not on measures
of historical thinking, were able to tranfer historical thinking strategies to
current issues, and did significantly better on tests of factual knowledge
and general reading comprehension. So studies across grade levels provide
evidence that students are capable of learning multiple texts strategies in
history for both reading and writing.
In the sciences, Prain, Hand, and their colleagues engaged in a series
of studies of models of writing in science, and found that students ben-
efit from instruction that involves them writing for a variety of purposes
to a variety of audiences, and in a variety of genres (Hand, 1999; Hand,
Prain, & Wallace, 2002; Prain & Hand, 1999). They recommend that stu-
dents be given writing assignments in science that include explanation, sets
of instructions, letters, reports, diagrams, and so on for the purpose of
clarifying, applying, or persuading peers, younger students, a government
agency, and others. Elizabeth Moje and her team (Textual Tools Study
Group, 2006) developed units to teach science by pairing a textbook pas-
sage with a popular science passage on the same topic, and they taught stu-
dents to translate science information into different forms (e.g. from text to
diagram, to data table) Students had to write explanations that their peers
reviewed for quality. Students across all classrooms—regardless of entering
skill level—demonstrated more developed and scientifically accurate and
appropriate explanations when compared to their writing at the outset of
the interventions, as well as significant gains in science concept knowledge
(Textual Tools Study Group, 2006; Moje, 2007; Moje, Sutherland, Solo-
mon, & Vanderkerkof, 2010).
Greenleaf and associates taught science teachers, through an appren-
ticeship, to develop science lessons focused on the use of multiple texts and
multiple representations of data. The teachers taught students to engage
in sense-making from these texts, to monitor their comprehension, and
to solve problems in understanding as they arose. A randomized experi-
ment of high school biology teaching and learning showed that the students
improved their skills at integrating information across sources and repre-
sentations. They also made significant achievement gains on their on state
language arts, reading comprehension, and biology tests (Greenleaf et al.,
2009).
176 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
Teachers usually want to know several things before they teach students
multiple text strategies. Some of these issues are addressed in this section.
Text Complexity
Adolescent readers often struggle with their content area texts for a variety
of reasons. Perhaps they have general reading difficulties, such as word rec-
ognition and fluency problems that affect all of their reading. Maybe they
lack adequate general vocabulary knowledge or struggle with the abstract,
decontextualized nature of academic language. It could be that the text
genre (e.g., a scientific journal article) or structure (e.g., a mixture of nar-
rative and expository text) is unfamiliar. It could be that the student lacks
appropriate background information or that the text itself is “inconsider-
ate” (e.g. Beck, McGowan, & Worthy, 1995)—that is, it fails to provide
explanation of technical vocabulary, lacks appropriate explanations and
examples, or uses arcane language. In addition, perhaps students do not
approach reading within a particular disciplinary lens and therefore do not
understand what to pay attention to or what questions to ask. Whatever
the reason, these struggles are still evident when there is more than one
text, and may be magnified if the texts represent different genres, were
written in different contexts, or have contradictory purposes and messages.
Thus the difficulty level of the texts students read is an issue, but the mea-
surement of difficulty is complex. For a single text reading, any one of
the conditions noted above could make the texts too difficult, and most
often, more than one of the conditions interact. For example, Britton and
Gulgoz (1991) found that students who lack background information are
more troubled by inconsiderate texts than students who have high levels of
background knowledge, especially when the text comprehension requires
extensive inferential thinking. Multiple text reading compounds the com-
plexity. Depending on what the problems are, different solutions are called
for—and not all of them involve finding texts at lower readability levels.
An ACT study (American College Testing, 2006) found that students’
preparation for college depended on the extent to which they could read
complex texts. Too often, students do not get the practice reading these
kinds of texts that they need, even though, with a high level of instructional
support, students can often read text that is too difficult to read indepen-
dently.
The CCSS make it even more imperative that we find ways to support
Reading and Writing across Multiple Texts 177
students as they read complex texts. This set of standards expects students
to read more difficult texts than they have read in the past. They define text
complexity as the interaction of three factors: a qualitative evaluation of the
text, a quantitative evaluation of the text, and an interaction of text and
task that is matched to the characteristics of readers.
Different solutions are called for depending on the reasons students
experience difficulty reading the texts, as represented in the following list.
Teachers could:
Using more than one text about a particular topic may actually facili-
tate gains in text comprehension about a particular topic. The easier texts
in the set could build background that makes the more difficult texts easier
to understand. Also, multiple readings of information that are repeated
across texts may increase the likelihood that students will gain a deeper
understanding of the information.
I would like to say more about the first item: “Encourage close read-
ing of texts.” The term “close reading” is extremely popular in educational
circles lately, yet there is a great deal of disagreement about what it means.
Some think that close reading is a strategy or set of procedures; some
think it is a lesson. I define close reading as the careful reading of texts to
explore their meaning on various levels, actively negoiating with the texs
to unearth and evaluate possible meanings. This kind of reading requires
self-regulation to engage in problem solving and to overcome challenges to
interpretation. If students are reading multiple texts closely, not only are
they focusing on one text’s interpretation, but they are also comparing that
interpretation with others. Close reading in history might involve looking
178 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
for the source of information and the perspective of the writer, and students
might surmise the context in which the text is written so that differences in
what various texts say might be attributed to these things. Close reading in
science might entail looking at the data and reading the graphic informa-
tion and the prose information recursively, inferring from this information
what a text means and how trustworthy it is, then reading other texts in
the same way to add to their understanding of the scientific information.
To get students engaged in this kind of close reading, teachers need to
create a climate for reading that recognizes students’ difficulties with text
and honors their persistence in using problem-solving strategies to over-
come those difficulties. That is, students must have permission to struggle,
to reread, to discuss difficult words or passages with others, and to not be
satisfied until they have deeply understood and thought about what they
have read. Teachers need to help students feel competent enough to figure
out what they find challenging (providing support but not answers).
History
As discussed earlier in this chapter, historians are always reading texts
with a critical eye—that is, as arguments for particular interpretations of
Reading and Writing across Multiple Texts 179
historical events. Thus, when reading multiple texts in history, the most
authentic purpose for reading is to determine a credible interpretation of an
event—what caused it, what effects it had, how significant it was. In read-
ing any document in a set of documents, then, the reader must determine
the credibility of the source, evaluate the context in which the message was
written, weigh the evidence that is being offered for the interpretation, and
evaluate how well that interpretation agrees or disagrees with others in
order to decide what to believe.
In my teaching of multiple texts in history, I first ask students to what
it is that historians do. My research (Hynd-Shanahan et al., 2004) suggests
that students begin to answer that question in a way that assumes histo-
rians to be nothing more than than documenters. They believe historians
write down exactly what happened. In the discussion, however, they soon
come to realize that that is an inadequate description—because historians
search for many different accounts of what happened, and they begin to
view them as synthesizers. Some subsequently start to shift their opinions
to note that historians need to judge the accuracy of accounts—thus they
believe historians act as arbiters. If they keep on discussing the issue, some
will even come to recognize that historians have their own viewpoints and
biases that influence their final interpretation. These emerging notions of
the historian’s role in interpreting historical events are key. To read and
write like historians, students need to understand that they are reading
arguments rather than truth when they read historical text.
I teach students about the strategies that historians use when they
read: sourcing, contextualization, and corroboration. That is, I explain
what they are, I model how they are used by thinking out loud about them
as I read a text excerpt, and I have the students practice using the strate-
gies, both as a whole group and independently or in small groups. It is only
after I know that students understand the task (to determine a credible
interpretation of an event) and the strategies (sourcing, contextualization,
and corroboration) that I introduce a text set. As noted earlier, three texts
are an optimal beginning point. The first text sets up the context and pro-
vides background information. The second and third texts are read using
the strategies.
Other teachers, however, have introduced the idea of history reading
in a slightly different way, without teaching the strategies first. After ask-
ing students what historians did, one history teacher I work with at Project
READI began a unit on the Columbian Exchange by having students read
three texts: one was a document by a local priest castigating Columbus for
decimating and torturing the peoples they conquered. The other two texts
were written by historians who both used the first document as evidence.
One author used it almost exclusively, taking the position that there was
no Columbian exchange—rather, there was only exploitation. The other
historian minimally used the first document and included evidence pointing
180 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
to the ways both Europe and the “New World” benefitted—a true Colum-
bian exchange. These three texts help students realize that historians had
different perspecives, used evidence in different ways depending on the per-
spectives, and were, indeed, interpreters of history. While students were
reading this text set, the teacher was introducing the concepts of sourcing,
contextualization, and corroboration, making these strategies explicit dur-
ing and after instruction.
To help students engage in the strategies, I ask them to create two
comparison and contrast charts. On one chart, students take notes about
the source of each text (the author, the kind of text, the publisher, where
the information came from) and the context of each text (when it was writ-
ten, for what audience, and in what political, social, economic climate). To
find this information, a student might have to search a website or search
the jacket of the book or read the preface and the table of contents. To find
out the political, social, or economic climate, students may have to search
outside sources; the teacher at this point might want to provide her exper-
tise in helping students understand contextual issues or point them to key
sources of information, such as the anchor text they read for background
information.
The second chart I have students create is a comparison–contrast chart
of the issues for the purposes of corroboration. For example, when we
studied the Gulf of Tonkin incident of the Vietnam conflict, students knew
from the background text that historians argued about three points: (1)
what happened, (2) whether the United States instigated it, and (3) whether
President Johnson pushed the Gulf of Tonkin resolution through Congress
knowing that the justification he used was not entirely truthful. Students
wrote these points in the form of questions that could be answered “yes”
or “no” (or, in some cases, “maybe”) across the top of their chart and
wrote the text titles down the side of their chart. That is, they wrote these
three questions: (1) Did North Vietnam attack the U.S.S. Maddox? (2) Did
the United States intentionally provoke North Vietnam? (3) Did President
Johnson manipulate Congress? When they came to evidence in their read-
ing that spoke to one of the points, students answered the question, then
paraphrased the evidence in the appropriate box and wrote down the page
number where they found it. They could then compare the texts on those
three issues.
Students need to discuss what they find using the charts with a more
knowledgeable other, such as the teacher. This discussion is important
because students do not have the expertise or the mature viewpoints of
practicing historians. For example, my students thought that a book that
was “self-published” was automatically just as credible as a book produced
by a reputable publishing company, and that an article in a local newspaper
carried the same evidentiary weight as an article published in a newspaper
Reading and Writing across Multiple Texts 181
like the Washington Post or New York Times, papers which are (or which
used to be) known for their dogged pursuit of reliable information. They
also held a considerable bias for authors who “were there” over historians,
believing, for example, that Dean Rusk was a more credible source of infor-
mation than the historian who had written his dissertation on Vietnam
and who had published a three-volume set of annotated primary docu-
ments. When I asked questions, however, that got them to examine these
beliefs, they changed their thinking. For example, when I asked students
what made them think that Dean Rusk was without bias, some students
brought up the idea that he had his own reputation on the line and, in
defending that reputation, might not be giving his audience the most unbi-
ased presentation of the facts. I set up a scenario for them of an accident
site and asked them who would have the more credible account—any one
person who witnessed the accident or the reporter who interviewed all of
the witnesses. But students were rightly quick to point out that the reporter,
too, could have had biases. These discussions helped students form more
nuanced interpretations of the event.
In their essays that were part of the exam about the Vietnam conflict,
students were asked to take a stand on one of three questions and pro-
vide evidence for their viewpoint. Because they all had thought very deeply
about their stand and the evidence to support it before taking the test, they
could easily write coherent, well-supported essays.The first time I engaged
students in a multiple text project I was surprised by the quality of their
writing; as I continued to engage students in this kind of instruction, I came
to expect it. However, I am still amazed at the transformation that takes
place in students’ understanding of what it means to read history and how
much more students are engaged in learning history when they take respon-
sibility for interpretation.
are read to help students comprehend them and to ensure that students are
able to make appropriate links to the other texts.
In addition, teachers can construct other guiding questions that stu-
dents can use in collaborative work to help them think critically about the
various texts they are reading. Steve Stahl and I (Stahl & Shanahan, 2004)
called these “procedural facilitators,” in that they facilitate the use of the
same procedures historians use (see Table 10.1).
When historians are reading the text, they look for evidence of bias
in the language authors use by asking themselves questions about the con-
notation of particular words, by evaluating what was not said about the
topic, and so on. All of these questions, if students learn to ask them, help
them to evaluate a particular text and compare it with the others they are
reading. The final result should be that students are better able to decide
what kind of cross-textual evidence is credible as they learn to make their
own interpretations of historical events.
Science
As noted, scientists read multiple texts on any one topic and engage in
writing across multiple contexts for multiple purposes. Teachers need to
invite their students into the various discourses used in science. Scientists
approach reading somewhat differently than do historians, however. Sha-
nahan et al. (2011), found that the chemists they studied engaged in two
distinct kinds of reading, depending on the kind of text they read and their
level of knowledge about the topic. Bazerman (1998) found that physicists
engaged in those two processes as well. That is, when their topic knowledge
was low, the scientists read uncritically, for the purpose of learning. When
we asked the chemists about how students should read their textbooks,
they emphasized this kind of learning-focused reading. If they knew a lot
about the topic or if they were reading a journal article or piece in the
popular press (e.g., a newspaper article), they would adopt a critical read-
ing style, engaging in many of the same processes the historians used when
reading (sourcing, contextualizing, and corroborating).
So how should multiple texts be used in science classes? Certainly,
students should read the various discourses of science, classified by Wignell
(1994) as (1) procedure (to provide instruction for experiments); (2) proce-
dural recount (to record what has already been done in an experiment); (3)
science report (to organize information by setting up taxonomies, parts,
or steps, or by listing properties); and (4) science explanation (describing
how and why phenomena occur). Note that (3) and (4) appear most often
in science textbooks, and (1) and (2) appear most often in scientific jour-
nals. In addition to these, Prain and Hand (1999) note other genres that are
appropriate for science writing such as field notes, a diagram, a brochure,
or a letter. Considering Bazerman’s (1998) reminder that scientists have
to cross genres to gain funding, secure patents, and disseminate findings
to a lay audience, asking students to read and write these different types
of texts in science class makes sense. For writing assignments, Prain and
Hand recommend that teachers vary these four elements on any given topic:
(1) the genre, (2) the purpose, (3) the audience, and (4) the method of text
production. If the topic were “the urban heat island,” for example, students
might be asked to write a scientific explanation in order to clarify ideas for
another student, using pen and paper, or write a proposal to a government
agency to alter the effects of the urban heat island for the benefit of the
city’s inhabitants (a persuasive argument that includes how the ideas are
applied), using a computer. For our purposes, (teaching students to process
multiple texts) students would be asked to engage in both types of writing.
Because each of these genres uses distinct structures and rhetorical moves,
these need to be taught.
Moje’s (2007) idea of pairing a textbook-like scientific explanation
with an article in a popular science magazine or other type of text show-
ing an application of the scientific phenomenon makes sense as well. When
reading the scientific explanation in the textbook, students would be in
learning mode. They would engage in strategies to help them learn the infor-
mation in the text, such as transforming text into diagrams (or vice versa),
identifying and learning key vocabulary through activities such as concept
cards, and so on. When reading the “popular science” application text,
they would be engaged in sourcing, contextualization, and corroboration.
184 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
That is, they would be finding out who the author is and to what audience
he or she is writing, what the context of the writing is about, and how well
the text corresponds to the science.
Another pairing of articles to help students make sense of scientific
study might be an experimental article on a particular topic paired with a
newspaper or popular science article on the same topic. In such a pairing,
students could evaluate the science (How well did the scientists follow the
scientific method? Did their findings make sense?) and then see how those
findings are translated to another audience. Alternately, an article on a par-
ticular topic written in the past paired with one on the same topic written
more recently would help students to understand how scientific findings
change with new methodology, new measurements, and so on.
I used two popular science texts on sea turtles to help students engage
in critical thinking about science information. One text is dated, and some
of the information is no longer thought to be true. If students don’t pay
attention to the date of the articles, they can become confused. That text is
written to persuade the audience to back conservation efforts of a particular
government agency. The other text is written to provide information about
sea turtles to students. For science topics, I suggest focusing on learning the
information first. Students read one of the texts, write down the informa-
tion they learn, then group that information and label it. For the sea turtles
topic, for example, students write down information and group it under
such labels as (1) physical appearance, (2) reproduction, (3) habitat, and so
on. They place this information on a chart, with the labels along one axis
and the two texts along another, and the actual information (e.g., weight =
150 pounds; large flippers) in the boxes next to the first text. Then students
read the second text. If the second text agrees with the first text, they place
a check in the box next to the second text. If it is new information, they
put a plus and add the new information, and if it disagrees with the first
text, they put an x in the box and write down the disagreement. Students
can complete this task in small groups or alone. When they are finished,
the class discusses the similarities and differences between the texts. The
differences provide the teacher with the opportunity to help students pay
attention to the source of the information and the context in which it was
written. The contextual analysis includes seeing when the text was written,
to what audience, and for what purpose. Students see that one of the texts
is dated and are then able to evaluate the credibility of the information. The
final step is to have students write a synthesis of the two texts, using only
the information that appears to be credible. The activity loosely mirrors the
processes used by scientists when they read several texts on the same topic.
Science inquiry projects (such as those required in science fairs) all
involve the synthesis and critical evaluation of multiple texts as well as
the ability to use scientific method to answer a question. Yet students are
expected to know how to think about the information in more than one
Reading and Writing across Multiple Texts 185
text without being taught how to do so. That assumption may be unfair to
students, as they will flounder in their attempts to engage in true scientific
inquiry.
Mathematics
The Shanahan et al. (2011) study found that the mathematicians they stud-
ied did not view sourcing and contextualization as key elements in read-
ing mathematics. One of the mathematicians explained to us that it just
doesn’t matter when a mathematics text was written. Years later, it could
still be the object of intense study. In the same vein, it doesn’t matter who
did the writing, according to him. What matters is the text on the page.
These mathematicians engaged in critical reading, but it appeared different
than the critical reading done by the chemists and historians in our study.
Mathematicians, they told us, look for a kind of precise sense-making. They
want to make sure that the math is without error, and that every word and
term is accurately used, that a logical progression of ideas unfolds. So read-
ing and writing multiple texts in mathematics will look different than it does
in science or history. In the application of math to everyday life, precision
truly matters. For example, it is a matter of life and death that an engineer
correctly calculates the weight that can be borne by a particular floor.
That a sloppy or inaccurate application can be quite important is an
idea that is easier communicated to students through multiple texts. As
in the science example above, a typical textbook explanation of a math-
ematics principle could be paired with an applied text, such as in a maga-
zine or journal article. The textbook passage is read in a “learning” mode.
That is, students learn key vocabulary and the processes that are described.
They write explanations of the processes in their own words, solve prob-
lems using the process, and engage in other activities such as writing their
own problems. When they are asked to read the applied text, they are to
read critically. That is, they look for errors in the text—to see whether all
vocabulary, formulae, explanations, and so on are accurate, that they are
appropriately applied, that there is a logical progression of ideas, and that
the unit of measurement makes sense. Corroboration, too, is an important
process to be used in mathematics. Mathematics teachers commonly com-
plain that students can do the problems assigned after reading the text, but
have difficulty figuring out how to solve problems on a test, when they have
to decide among several different processes for solving them. They say that
students don’t know how the problems on the test compare with the ones
they learned to do in their assignments. Thus comparing the test problems
with the textbook problems may help students come up with ways to cat-
egorize text problems. When writing, students could write multiple texts
about the same process. One might be an explanation of the process and
another might be an application of the principle.
186 DEVELOPING LITERACY STRATEGIES
Conclusion
This chapter has made a case for using more than one text when teach-
ing content-area subjects. I used three discipline examples to discuss how
this might be done—history, science, and mathematics. Even beyond these
examples, however, more needs to be done to teach students how to take
into account multiple messages when they read and write for different audi-
ences. Students are already reading multiple texts in their daily lives and
they are increasingly reading multiple texts in school, but they won’t be
able to process these texts critically unless they are provided some instruc-
tion in how to do it.
1. What difficulties do adolescents experience when they have more than one text
to read about a particular topic? How can these difficulties be ameliorated?
2. Think of a topic you would teach in your subject area. What kinds of texts
would be good choices for involving students in learning about that topic?
Where would you find them?
3. How would you teach students to search for multiple texts they might find
on the Internet regarding topics in your subject area? How would you help
them to evaluate them for credibility?
4. How would you react to students who, after evaluating the credibility of
the texts they are reading, decide to believe a harmful or untenable position
(e.g., racist or in some other way biased or offensive)?
5. What writing genres are used in your subject area? How could you help
students to write in these various genres?
Acknowledgment
References
American College Testing. (2006). Reading between the lines: What the ACT
reveals about college readiness for reading. Retrieved fromhttp://act.org/
path/policy/reports/reading.html.
Bazerman, C. (1998). Shaping written knowledge: The genre and activity of
Reading and Writing across Multiple Texts 187
developing
disciplinary literacies
cHaPter 11
Fostering acquisition
of mathematics language
Codruta temple
Kathleen A. Hinchman
The Common Core State Standards for Mathematics (CCSSM), like the
Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts, have been
adopted in most of the United States (National Governors Association
[NGA] Center for Best Practices & Council of Chief State School Officers
[CCSSO], 2010a, 2010b). The CCSSM emphasize the development of stu-
dents’ conceptual understandings, procedural skill and fluency, and flex-
ible application in and outside the classroom. The CCSSM build on those
expectations spelled out previously by the Principles and Standards for
School Mathematics (National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, 2000)
and Curriculum Focal Points (National Council of Teachers of Mathemat-
ics, 2006). However, the new standards require more complex approaches
to mathematics content, demanding that students in all grades learn to
191
192 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Ariadna: . . . I have two points, A, of coordinates x1 and y1, and B, of coordinates
x2 and y2. I would like you to determine the slope of line AB function of the
coordinates of the points. . . . Please think and let’s see what ideas you have
for determining the slope.
Students start talking among themselves, some in pairs, and some in spontaneously
formed small groups. They turn around to face the people sitting behind them.
Some move their chairs to join a group at a different table. Some are writing in their
notebooks, alone. Cristina is having a heated argument with Ovid. At one of the front
tables, Dean and Raul are laughing heartily. June and Carmela are laughing, too,
while drawing lines and angles in the air. There’s much noise, but they are all working
on the problem. I hear Chip say to Ada, “And there goes my axiom, right down the
drain.” Nobody volunteers for about 5 minutes. Ariadna waits in silence.
Misha (over the noise): If we take . . . if we take the projection of B on the x-axis, and
we take the projection of A on the i-axis, we get two small triangles, and the
slope would be the tangent of the angle between the line and x.
Ariadna: You want to construct a parallel to AB through this projection point. It’s a
variant. Yes, Raul, how did you do it?
Raul: I prolonged the line to make it intersect x and . . . we need the coordinates of
the point of intersection.
Ariadna: But do you know . . . ? I don’t know what coordinates the point of
intersection has.
Raul: And y . . . and then the tangent is y2 – y over x2 – x.
Ariadna: Well, yes, except you are introducing an x and a y in the formula that I don’t
need, because I want the slope to be only a function of the coordinates of A and
B.
Iolanda: If I write yB – yA over xB – xA . . .
Ariadna: I know where you want to get but I’m asking you, how do you get there?
You’re perfectly right, Iolanda, but what did you do to get there?
Iolanda: I drew a parallel to x through B, I got similar triangles, corresponding angles
. . . and then the angle is the same and I can write the tangent.
Ariadna: I got you. But I want to see what Laurel understood. He will dictate the
solution and I will write it on the board.
L aurel: We draw a parallel and we will have similar triangles.
Ariadna: So, we construct a parallel to the x axis . . .
As Laurel begins his explanation, Ariadna starts drawing and writing on the board,
converting his words into symbolic language. Several other students join in the
explanation.
Ariadna: This means that the slope of a line determined by the points of coordinates
(x1, y1), (x2, y2) will be . . . ?
Maria: The slope of a line determined by the points of coordinates (x1, y1), (x2, y2)
will be y2 – y1 over x2 – x1.
the board, to compose their summaries: slope, number, x–y plane, value,
two points, the difference of the ordinates, the difference of the abscissas,
ratio, increasing oblique line, decreasing oblique line, horizontal line, and
vertical line.
Except for the new term/concept slope, all the other terms were part of
students’ mathematical vocabularies. However, the terms ratio, the differ-
ence of the abscissas, and the difference of the ordinates had not been used
in defining the slope of the line determined by two points. Ariadna’s includ-
ing them on her list of terms to be used pushed the students to rephrase the
definition they had constructed in the previous lesson (“The slope of a line
determined by the points of coordinates (x1, y1), (x 2 , y 2) will be y 2 – y1 over
x 2 – x1”) in more general terms.
When students had finished writing and had submitted their papers,
Ariadna asked, “Who would like to try to formulate a text, remembering
what they wrote in their paper, that includes all the words on the board?”
Figure 11.2 is an excerpt of the dialogue that ensued.
Just like the written assignment, this sharing episode provided stu-
dents with the opportunity to practice using the newly learned vocabu-
lary, the sentence pattern, and the symbolic notation in conjunction with
Rada: I said that the slope of a line represented the tangent of the angle formed by
a line and the abscissa of the system in which the line is situated .. . and that
the line is in the x–y plane.
Theo: The slope is the angle made by the line and the x-axis, direction plus.
Ariadna: The slope is the angle?
Student: The tangent.
Ariadna: The tangent of the angle, be careful! So, the slope is the tangent of the
angle made by the line and the x-axis, positive direction.
Dean: I said that the tangent was determined by the angle.
Ariadna: It’s okay if you said that it was determined by the angle and then said that
it was the tangent of the angle. What else . . . ?
Misha: The value of a slope . . . The value of the slope of a line in a x–y plane,
which passes through two points equals the difference .. . the ratio between
the difference of the abscissas and .. .
Maria: The other way around! Of the ordinates.
Alex: Of the ordinates and of the abscissas.
Misha: Of the ordinates and of the abscissas.
Ariadna: And then?
Sample 1. (low) Although I was absent from the last math class, I know that the title
of the last lesson was the slope of the line. In an x–y plane the slope of the line is
the angle formed by a line and an angle. The value that this slope takes is the ratio
between the difference of the ordinates and the difference of the abscissas. To be able
to realize the slope of the line, we need two points (the projections of the tips of the
angle).
Sample 2. (medium) The slope is the steepness of the line that crosses an x–y plane.
It has a value equal to the ratio between the difference of the ordinates and the
difference of the abscissas of the two points that it crosses. If the line is an increasing
oblique line, then the value of the slope is a positive number, if it is a decreasing
oblique line, then the slope has a negative number as its value. If the line is vertical,
then the value of the slope is 0. The value of the slope is calculated using the function
of the tangent of the angle formed by the line with x, positive direction.
Sample 4. (high) The slope of a line that crosses two points on an x–y plane equals
the value of the ratio between the difference of the ordinates and the difference of
the abscissas of the two points. If the line is horizontal (parallel to x), then the slope
equals 0. If it is vertical, then the slope cannot be defined (as the angle between the
line and x has 90 degrees). If the line is an increasing oblique line, then the value of
the slope is a positive number, and if it is a decreasing oblique line, then the value
of the slope is a negative number. By definition, the value of the slope is equal to the
tangent of the angle between the line and the x-axis, positive direction.
Ariadna: Another observation: when you write, “The slope is the ratio between the
difference of the ordinates and the difference of the abscissas,” from the point
of view of a reader who knows mathematics, that means that the numerator
is the difference of the ordinates and the denominator is the difference of the
abscissas. That’s what “the ratio between” means. If you write, “the slope
is the ratio between the difference of the abscissas and the difference of the
ordinates,” then you are obviously saying quite the opposite. . . . “Positive
angle,” somebody said. “For any line, we take the positive angle.” We talked
about the angle between the line and the x-axis, positive direction. There are
such things as positive angles, but we haven’t studied them. They are oriented
angles. So, if I go this way (draws an angle and an arrow on the board), it will be
a positive angle, and if I go this way, it will be a negative angle.
Two phrases that some of the students had used inaccurately in their
papers (ratio between and positive angle) gave Ariadna the opportunity to
teach a mini-lesson in mathematical literacy. Besides clarifying the meaning
of the phrases, she illustrated how the same technical terms had different
meanings depending on how they were used in a sentence. Her reference
to the “reader who knows mathematics” also suggested that mathematical
texts are read somewhat differently from other texts, in that a reader’s suc-
cess in making sense of them depends critically on the writer’s using techni-
cal terminology precisely and accurately.
Significantly, one of the inaccuracies that Ariadna pointed out was not
due to students’ not knowing the technical terms. Instead, it was caused
by how the terms were related to one another in the sentence (“the ratio
between the difference of the ordinates and the difference of the abscis-
sas,” as opposed to “the ratio between the difference of the abscissas and
the difference of the ordinates”). This reinforces the point we made in the
previous section, namely that conceptual understanding involves not only
knowledge of words for concepts, but also (and primarily so) knowledge of
the relationships among concepts and of the ways in which these relation-
ships can be expressed in language.
Having discussed the need for precision in using technical terms, Ari-
adna went on to give students feedback on the structure of their texts (see
Figure 11.5). This part of the feedback was meant to raise students’ aware-
ness of three features that a mathematical text should have. One feature
is that it should include a clear definition of the concept being discussed.
Another is that it should be complete, including all the information needed
for the reader to fully understand it. The third is that it should be coherent,
that is, organized in a way that shows logical connections between the con-
cept being explained and other related concepts—mirroring the internal
logic of the larger conceptual system.
The principle here is that a teacher should provide feedback to stu-
dents to help them refine their conceptual understanding and the linguistic
Ariadna: As for the construction. . . . Those of you who tried to include all the phrases
that I gave you succeeded in constructing a fairly coherent text, in the sense that
you started with a definition, (you said) that the slope was . . . , after which,
since you had the phrase “the x–y plane” there, you tried to place the line on a
plane. When you saw “value,” “the difference of the ordinates,” “the difference
of the abscissas, “ratio,” all of these made you think of the expression of the
slope when we know two points that the line crosses, and then, of the slope of
an increasing and decreasing oblique line, of a horizontal and vertical line.
Sample 1. The slope of a line is the tangent of the angle formed by the line and the
x-axis, positive direction (m = (y2 – y1) / (x2 – x1). Problem: Given the points A(–4, 3)
and B(2, 4), calculate the slope of the line that crosses the two points.
Sample 2. The slope of a line situated on a plane that has a x–y system is equal to
the tangent of the angle formed by the line and the x-axis in its positive direction.
Problem: Points A and B belong to line d. Knowing that the coordinates of A(1, 3) and
B(2, 4), find the slope of line d.
Sample 3. The slope of a line is the tangent of the angle formed by the line with the
x-axis (positive direction). As a line is determined by two points, P1(x1, y1), P2(x2, y2),
we can write the slope (m) as (y2 – y1) / (x2 – x1), the difference of the ordinates / the
difference of the abscissas. Problem: Find the slope of a line knowing that the points
A(2, 3) and B(5, 9) belong to this line.
Sample 4. The slope of a line is equal to the value of the tangent of the angle formed
by the respective line and the x-axis, positive direction. The formula of the slope: m
= (y2 – y1) / (x2 – x1). Problem: A line intersects the y-axis in point A(0, 20). Find the
area of the triangle formed by this line, the y-axis, and the line that forms an angle of
75 degrees with the x-axis. Find the slope of the line that divides the triangle into two
similar triangles and intersects two of its sides in their middle.
audience other than themselves or their teacher (one may write a definition
for oneself or for one’s teacher, but only mathematicians write problems for
others to solve). The task therefore positioned the students as mathematics
experts, which meant that their texts had to meet the standards of expert
writing.
The principle here is that a teacher can support students’ concurrent
conceptual and linguistic development to the point where they can assume
expert identities and thus create mathematical texts typically produced by
mathematicians.
Conclusion
precision. Next she invited students to use the new vocabulary and sen-
tence patterns in conjunction with previously learned technical vocabulary
in writing, and then, orally, to explain and define the concept, providing
feedback to illustrate the precision of mathematics language and to explain
conventions of mathematical genres. Finally, she asked students to produce
formal definitions and to draft problems of their own, applying knowledge
of the new mathematical concept and of the language needed to express it
in expert ways.
Ariadna’s practice is an example of how a teacher can develop stu-
dents’ mathematical knowledge to include, beyond computational fluency,
conceptual understanding and the ability to engage in mathematical pro-
cesses. While the instructional unit included opportunities for students to
develop computational fluency (mostly through homework problems), most
of the instructional time was spent in activities that allowed students to
broaden and deepen their understanding of the key concept as well as to
develop their ability to use suitable mathematics language to talk and write
about it.
If we view Ariadna’s instruction as aimed at supporting students’
mathematics language acquisition, we will notice that her instructional
steps echo what we know about supporting language acquisition more gen-
erally (Cambourne, 1995). Cambourne emphasized that students’ willing-
ness to engage is key, and this brings us to another principle of Ariadna’s
teaching: Students are more likely to engage with learning subject-specific
ways of using language when they feel safe about the risks they need to
take. Ariadna respected students’ contributions at all times. However,
throughout the activities that she designed in order for her students to
practice using language to operate with the new concept, she constantly
provided feedback, modeling and explaining the conventions of mathemat-
ics language and genres along the way, thereby helping students to learn to
communicate with the precision needed for “the reader who knows math-
ematics.”
Research on subject-specific language acquisition suggests that best
practice in mathematics literacy means finding ways to help students
become members of the discourse community of mathematicians, that is,
speakers/writers of mathematics language (e.g., Rittenhouse, 1998). In this
view, simply asking students to read, write, speak, and listen as they engage
in problem-based teaching, as is common in much current mathematics
instruction, is not sufficient to develop mathematics language and in-depth
conceptual understanding of mathematics. Similarly, content-area literacy
strategies that help students build on prior knowledge, draw inferences,
attend to text structure, learn technical vocabulary, or write to learn offer
necessary but not sufficient exposure for students to gain entrée to this
discourse community. A teacher must also understand, demonstrate, and
explain the expectations of the mathematical discourse community, as well
Fostering Acquisition of Mathematics Language 205
1. Recognizing that the key principle involves providing students with sup-
ported entrée into the mathematics discourse community, consider alterna-
tives to Ariadna’s instructional cycle. For instance, how could students work
together to analyze various written mathematical texts (e.g., explanations
or definitions) to discern features of mathematics language descriptions of
key concepts?
2. Work with other mathematics and literacy teachers to identify key concepts
and the language needed to express them, and plan instructional sequences
(including language development objectives) that echo Ariadna’s efforts to
teach students mathematics language so they will be able to describe key
concepts for “the reader who knows mathematics.” Such lessons could be
observed and scripted for lesson study to ground discussion of how the les-
sons address this chapter’s principles.
3. Consider features of the registers and genres typical of other disciplines and
design instructional sequences that show students how to shape their lan-
guage for use in these different discourse communities.
4. Invite local mathematicians, engineers, biologists, chemists, historians, or
other professionals to share primary source documents from their respective
disciplines with students. Invite students to compare and contrast features
of the language used in such documents and to discuss connections between
the language of the documents in each discipline and the language they are
learning in their academic studies.
References
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cHaPter 12
reading challenging
texts in High school
How Teachers Can Scaffold and Build
Close Reading for Real Purposes
in the Subject Areas
207
208 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Imagine walking into your classroom, the teacher’s lounge, or your office
and being asked to read the following text:
What is the first thing you would do upon being presented with this
reading task? Can you identify the main idea of the passage? What kind of
questions would you ask the person who demanded this reading act of you?
What kinds of questions would you ask yourself? Perhaps most important,
would you do it?
Many of you reading this chapter would probably ask, “Why? What
do you want me to do with it?” if presented with this reading task. You
might ask it simply because you are a good reader, and as such, you auto-
matically seek to establish purpose for reading. Or you would ask these
questions because you know that good readers attempt to establish a pur-
pose for reading when presented with a text they have not chosen to read.
When good readers have not chosen texts for themselves, they recognize
that the purpose for reading is not up to them to decide. Finally, you might
ask such questions because you know you have a choice and can refuse to
read the text if the reason for reading is not to your liking.
This note about choice is an important one. Literacy theorists argue
that choice in reading and writing tasks makes an enormous difference in
one’s motivation or engagement with a reading task (Guthrie & Wigfield,
2000). A number of studies have demonstrated that many young people do
not read academic texts with proficiency or high interest (Moje, Overby,
Tysvaer, & Morris, 2008; Perie, Grigg, & Donahue, 2005). The lack of
proficiency has been variously attributed to low literacy skills, to motiva-
tion and engagement, and to text difficulty.
Studies have also indicated, however, that young people read many
Reading Challenging Texts in High School 209
people need in order to comprehend the texts of high school content areas.
These skill and knowledge demands complicate secondary school reading
and are unique to subject matter texts.
To frame the analysis, we draw from our experience co-teaching 11th-
grade social studies students in a predominantly Latino/Latina neighbor-
hood of a large Midwestern city. As hinted at by the Emergency Quota Act
text excerpt with which we opened the chapter, we were studying a unit on
U.S. immigration issues and history. We framed the problem under study in
terms of contemporary questions around who should be allowed to immi-
grate into the United States, and whether and how immigration should be
monitored. We started with a contemporary problem and then looked back
in time to our nation’s founding, moving forward until we returned to the
present day. The analysis emphasizes the different types of knowledge nec-
essary for purpose setting, comprehension monitoring, and sense making,
with an examination of how knowledge and development intersect with
engagement when it comes to reading. Our analysis of the text challenges
students faced as they read primary sources throughout U.S. history is bol-
stered by findings from Moje’s research with young people in and out of
school.
Using this case, we demonstrate powerful subject-matter literacy
instruction that can meet the CCSS demands by illustrating our teaching
practices. We offer recommendations for teaching practices and specific
strategies to help teachers mediate these challenges and support young
people’s reading comprehension and written production of the texts
demanded for high school content-area learning. The suggested practices
are not intended to supplant project-based practices described above,
but to complement such teaching practices, in an attempt to support text
reading, learning from text, and text production while conducting both
natural and social science investigations, thus achieving the goals of the
CCSS. Indeed, in our conclusion, we offer an analysis of how these teach-
ing practices support the work of achieving the student outcomes called
for in the CCSS. Our analysis focuses in large part on the question of
close reading, a skill emphasized, but not well theorized, and thus largely
undeveloped in the CCSS. The concept of close reading, in particular,
is empty unless tied explicitly to the purposes for and nature of reading
closely in a specific domain (whether disciplinary or otherwise). In addi-
tion, we take on the question of the role of knowledge in close reading and
emphasize the point that proficient close reading attends to far more than
the words on the page. Drawing from our analysis of the knowledge and
skill needed to understand one brief text excerpt, we push for an under-
standing of close reading as being all about drawing from, connecting to,
and expanding the “necessary knowledge” (Moje, 2010) readers bring to
the act of reading.
Reading Challenging Texts in High School 211
We feature the Emergency Quota Act of 1921 text because it was in the
process of teaching that the complexity of knowledge and skill demands
implicit in what is, at first glance, a seemingly straightforward piece of text,
became obvious. Our analysis revealed at least six types of knowledge or
skill necessary for purpose-setting and sense-making of this short passage:
(1) semantic, (2) historical, (3) geographical, (4) mathematical, (5) discur-
sive, and (6) pragmatic.
Mathematical Knowledge
As mentioned above, per centum is a key phrase in this text that needs to
be understood in order to make sense of the text. However, the knowledge
required is not merely definitional (i.e., it is not enough merely to know that
the Latin phrase translates as “per one hundred,” it is also essential that
students understand what it means mathematically when a limit is set at 3
per 100). As obvious as this may seem to the adult reader, students in our
classes answered the question, “If there were 100 people from Albania in
212 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
the U.S. in 1910, then how many Albanians could immigrate to the U.S. in
1921?” with responses such as, “Five?” or “Twenty?” Students’ responses
indicated either a lack of skill in calculating percentages (or even a lack of
conceptual knowledge of what a percentage represents), or a lack of interest
in applying the mathematical concept to the historical information of the
passage (in some cases, they seemed to simply call out a number without
really stopping to think about the question). Both language and mini-math
lessons were necessary, as we discussed both the meaning of per centum,
using the Spanish for 100 as a way into the Latin word, and how to cal-
culate three per centum of a given number of residents. Making sense of
the numbers, however, raises questions about another kind of knowledge
required for making sense of this passage: knowledge of history and geog-
raphy.
Historical Knowledge
One of the most important types of knowledge for making sense of this
particular historical document is knowledge of past events, data, people,
and social and political issues and conflicts. Although a reader could com-
prehend the Emergency Quota Act’s surface meaning to be that in 1921
U.S. immigration law set limits on immigration and that those limits were
set to equal 3% of the people of a given nationality living in the United
States in 1910, the significance of the text is only revealed when one either
knows or examines the numbers of immigrants from different countries
living in the United States in 1910. If readers know anything about U.S.
immigration during the early 1900s, then they will know that the numbers
of different nationalities living in the United States were vastly different.
They might even know something about the nature of the differences (e.g.,
that the country was heavily populated by people of English and German
descent and less heavily populated by people of Italian, Romanian, or Pol-
ish descent). If, for example, readers had knowledge of the information
shown in Table 12.1, then they would be able to draw inferences about the
intent of the act, and they might put a different spin on the word “emer-
gency.”
Armed with the knowledge that the number of British residents in 1910
was higher than the number of Romanian or Polish residents, the reader
might infer that the law targeted 1910 as a way of limiting the numbers
of Romanian and Polish residents and allowing British peoples to main-
tain dominance in the larger population (the same sort of argument could
be made for German immigration in comparison to Italian immigration).
However, to do so, readers would then have to employ their mathematical
knowledge to determine that 3% of 65,923 (the number of Polish-born resi-
dents in 1910) is smaller than 3% of 1,221,283 (the number of British-born
residents in 1910). But the need to make that mathematical calculation
Reading Challenging Texts in High School 213
purpose of the original writer, the context in which the text was written,
and the probable effects of the text on other people or on historical events.
Historians read with their working purposes in mind, and those purposes
demand that they examine the author’s purpose and context of text they
study. Like historians, secondary school students must approach texts,
then, with multiple purposes in mind: One purpose might be to complete
the school task they have been assigned. But if we want students to learn
the concepts of the discipline, then students in a history class must assess
an original author’s purpose; analyze the historical, geographic, political,
and discursive contexts; corroborate evidence and information; and read
between the lines of the texts (Wineburg, 1991; VanSledright & Kelly,
1998). In other words, they need to read as historians would, not so that
they can become historians, but so that they can understand and question
how historical claims are produced and can analyze the importance of the
information for their lives as citizens (Wineburg & Martin, 2004).
Thus far, we have emphasized the role of knowledge and skill in making
sense of high school content-area texts. However, understanding this text
may depend most on readers’ interest in the topic or motivation to make
sense of the text for some purpose beyond being interested (e.g., to get a
school task done, to use the text as evidence in a debate). That is, people
need to want to know what texts mean in order to spend the time asking
questions, searching for information, or questioning contexts.
There are many possibilities for building on students’ motivation to
and interest in reading various texts, particularly if teachers choose topics
that appeal to youth interests. Many young people in this urban neighbor-
hood read texts outside of school that address issues and topics commonly
covered in social studies (Stockdill & Moje, 2013), which suggests that they
should find school social studies to be a fascinating and useful subject; in
other words, young people are motivated to learn social and natural sci-
ence concepts. The same research, however, yielded data that report the
opposite finding: These same students rated social studies among their least
useful and enjoyable subjects, with science a close second. What explains
this contradiction?
One challenge to interest and motivation may be that although adoles-
cent students may be highly interested in a topic, they are often less engaged
with academic texts about the topic because of the writing style of the
text. Several researchers have found that the lack of voice of academic texts
make them difficult for students to access (Paxton, 1999; Schleppegrell,
2004). Indeed, as we taught our unit on immigration, we noted that many
of the youth appeared to be highly engaged in our K-W-L (“what I know,
what I want to know, what I learned”; Ogle, 1986) brainstorming discus-
sions about immigration, but groaned when we passed out written texts to
read to help us learn what we wanted to know.
One notable exception was the reading of “The New Colossus” (Laza-
rus, 1883), a poem that we read together, engaging in a close reading and
analysis of each stanza. Although neither of us would claim that the students
were enthralled with this text, they did appear to be more engaged than
when they were asked to read texts independently, even when the activities
220 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
fostered new learning without denying the value and power of their per-
sonal experiences and knowledge.
Students’ beliefs also played a role in their interest in and willingness
to read the texts of U.S. immigration history. Encouraging them to use the
information they had learned throughout the unit—much of which actually
bolstered their perspectives—was challenging because they said that their
arguments were strong without the benefit of additional historical infor-
mation. However, discussion of what these texts meant for their beliefs,
and explicit attention to how the students might use the texts to support
or challenge particular ideas, seemed to generate interest in the texts. For
example, at the end of the unit, as we reviewed immigration laws through-
out history, one student objected to the name of one law, Operation Wet-
back (Garcia, 1980), stating that the name of the law was racist. That state-
ment inspired a different student to raise the question of when racial slurs
are considered racist, and when they are not. The heated and difficult dis-
cussion that ensued was generated from word and text and pointed back to
word and text, as well as to the central issue we were investigating, the role
of race in immigration law. Ultimately, the texts we read and the discus-
sion we had about racist language helped to frame an argument that many
of them planned to make in their final essays. The opportunity to discuss
their beliefs and values stemmed from and supported their readings of text.
Although this discussion felt, in the moment, as if it veered too much from
our careful reading of the texts and from the larger issues we were inves-
tigating with the students, we realized in our analysis of this conversation
that to have shut it down because it did not hew closely to the text and
activity goals would have been to close off a powerful learning space for
the students. In other words, we could have forced the students back to the
words of the Operation Wetback law, arguing that they had to attend to the
words on the page if they were to improve their reading skills, but to do so
would have constructed a reading act without a purpose, with no frame of
reference, and with little reason to continue reading.
Another excellent motivational resource in working with the youth in
our classrooms was the rich vocabulary and experience students possessed,
usually from interactions with previous classes, families, peer groups, and
popular cultural texts. Students were familiar, for example, with a num-
ber of terms relevant to immigration, such as alien, quota, undocumented,
bracero (worker), green card, visa, passport, and many others. They also
knew many technical terms from their previous history courses. They were
less familiar, in this case, with nontechnical vocabulary such as per centum
(see above), teeming or colossus (both from the Lazarus poem), or pauper
and moral turpitude (used in an 1891 immigration law).
We spent a great deal of time defining such terms, but we were also
able to make use of students’ extensive knowledge of popular culture in
interesting ways as we defined vocabulary or built background knowledge.
222 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
For example, when discussing the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, one stu-
dent volunteered that he had played a computer game in which the goal
was to protect Chinese workers who were building railroads in the United
States during the 1800s. Other students drew on their knowledge of the
African slave trade from past history courses to raise questions about
whether and how African were counted in immigration quotas or about
the history of world wars in developing hypotheses about which immigrant
groups were most accepted during different time periods of U.S. history.
In another instance, while engaging in a think-aloud of a journal entry
written by a Mexican bracero (worker), my colleague commented that
the worker’s mention of being fed bread and bologna as “glory” indicated
how hungry he must have been. Two students began to sing, “I’m from the
ghetto homies, I grew up on bread and bologna,” an excerpt of lyrics from
a popular rap song, “Move Around” (B.G., feat. Mannie Fresh, 2006).
The invoking of these lyrics led to a discussion of what bread and bologna
signified in the bracero’s text. In each of these cases, and many others, our
students exhibited a wealth of knowledge—albeit not always conventional,
not always deep, and not always complete or fully accurate—that could be
expanded to support their sense making of these historical texts.
a key ingredient in skillful reading (and writing). That means that teachers
must be clear about the knowledge demanded by a given text (we call this
necessary knowledge), have a general sense of the knowledge their students
bring to the reading, and have a clear idea about what they want the stu-
dents to learn from the text. With these three types of knowledge in mind,
teachers can design instruction that builds the necessary knowledge for
meaningful close reading. We suggest that although a teacher might occa-
sionally lecture to students, the mainstay of one’s teaching practice should
be offering information and leading students in critical thinking and rea-
soning about the information, just as we did in our immigration unit when
we presented students with primary sources, statistics, maps, and visual
images. We also facilitated whole-group knowledge elicitation and build-
ing through the process of scaffolding close reading of various texts, as we
discuss in the next section.
[than Canadians] want to come to the United States,” but getting this idea
out took approximately 5 minutes of probing around a single statement.
We maintained this pattern of probing for reasons throughout the unit,
and the students did shift to engaging the why questions, but it took some
time and required us to make a trade-off between teaching youth how to
ask questions of texts and themselves—even when their ideas may have
been inaccurate or partial—and covering content. In related work in sci-
ence classrooms, a number of researchers have found that teachers often
resist what some researchers refer to as pressing for understanding, in part
because they fear alienating or threatening students (Blumenfeld, Marx,
& Harris, 2006; Blumenfeld, Kempler, & Krajcik, 2006). Although it is
the case that rapid movement without much questioning pushes students
through the curriculum and keeps students’ attention focused on the points
at hand, it does not engage students in the kind of questioning they need
to develop for deep comprehension of advanced subject-matter texts or for
taking inquiry to new levels.
Visualizing Texts
The students we taught needed help visualizing what these texts meant in
terms of actual people. When we presented them with visual images of dif-
ferent groups represented by the numbers in the tables we presented, our
students appeared to make connections to the implicit goals of the laws,
underscoring the idea that literate practice, while focused on making sense
of encoded symbols, is also about more than just print codes or other sym-
bols (Moje, 2000). Images can help readers interpret texts (Eisner, 1994;
Kress, 2003; Kress & van Leeuwen, 1996), and visual images can prove to
be important tools in supporting students’ comprehension.
That said, it is important to note that visual images should not replace
print, especially for struggling readers. Some adolescent literacy researchers
have noted a tendency to offer struggling adolescent readers ways to opt out
of reading print in an effort to make content information accessible; these
scholars have also noted that such options may make content accessible,
but do not help adolescents improve their literacy skills (Dressman et al.,
2005). Thus, the point of using visualization and images is that they should
be used to support print reading and writing (and vice versa). One form of
representation should not simply replace the other. Moreover, teachers can
work with students to draw on past visual images to support their compre-
hension of print and other symbolic texts. New images do not need to be
offered with each reading; rather, readers can be encouraged to visualize
without the aid of actual images, but only if they are introduced to relevant
images when they first encounter new material or concepts outside their
experience.
Reading Challenging Texts in High School 227
We placed the texts side by side and asked the students to evaluate whether
the law excluding paupers and sick people lived up to the sentiment expressed
in Lazarus’s poem. Through this process, we were teaching vocabulary;
summarizing ideas within texts; synthesizing ideas across texts; modeling
critical reading, questioning, and thinking; and, most important, teaching
concepts, events, and actions central to the study of history and the social
sciences. In short, we were engaging these youth in comprehension instruc-
tion in the service of social studies learning, not apart from it.
1. Consider your own students. How could you connect from their interests to
the central concepts of your subject matter? What might have you have to
consider as you make those connections?
2. What are the major concepts of your subject area? How might you frame
a problem for students to study or on which they could take a stand, using
text resources from your area?
3. Considering those texts, what would your students need to know and be
able to do to understand the big ideas and apply them to the problem or
issue under study? Use the six types of knowledge/skill discussed in the
chapter analyze the necessary language skills, content knowledge, and
Reading Challenging Texts in High School 229
References
timothy Shanahan
Cynthia Shanahan
This chapter:
When we ask historians how much time they spend reading and writing,
they say all of the time; and anyone who has studied history understands
that making sense of the past requires intense reflection on the written
word. Yet history teachers face a particularly knotty dilemma—they have
students who, although they may know how to read, struggle with the his-
tory textbook and resist reading it (“Boring!”). The archaic language and
unfamiliar text organization of historical documents may pose even greater
challenges. Teachers may wonder, “Why haven’t these students learned
how to read in elementary school? And if they can’t read, shouldn’t the
English teachers be teaching them?”
232
Teaching History and Literacy 233
But reading literature isn’t the same as reading history. Each discipline
has its own way of communicating knowledge: a consequence of the unique
kinds of knowledge they create and the different standards they have for
determining what is worth studying. English teachers usually won’t know
enough about history to be able to teach students what to understand and
think about history; nor do they typically engage in such reading them-
selves. In addition, as students move through the grades, the material
they read becomes increasingly complex, abstract, and more specifically
enmeshed within a disciplinary focus.
Students may start out in third or fourth grade reading science and
social studies materials equally well. Subject-matter texts aren’t that differ-
ent initially, but by ninth grade, they are. By ninth grade the purposes, lan-
guage, page formatting, organizational structures, relationships of prose to
graphics, role of the author in interpretation, degrees of precision, nature of
critical response, and so on, differ markedly. The problem is compounded
by the fact that the texts for older students usually address content of which
students have little prior knowledge. The reading taught in the English class
likely won’t support the reading of increasingly complex history texts. It is
no wonder, then, that history teachers often eschew the textbook in favor
of lectures or video, or having the better students read the text aloud with
interspersed teacher explanations. The committed teacher is going to make
sure students get the historical information, even if they can’t or won’t read
history themselves.
The major job of the history teacher is not to tell students the infor-
mation from the history books, but to enable them to make sense of this
information in a sophisticated and appropriate manner. Such reading is
essential for college, even in fields other than history (students are often
required to learn the history of their major fields). Making decisions about
who to vote for requires the kind of reading practiced by historians who
consider evidence from multiple sources and opposing perspectives. Dig-
ging into the past helps one better understand and operate in the present. In
the workplace, an individual who knows how the current situation came to
be may have a better idea about how to change it. Yet digging into the past
takes initiative and must be done without a teacher’s support. Thus by the
time students get through high school, they should be on their way to being
independent and sophisticated readers of history.
The wide adoption of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for
the English Language Arts (National Governors Association Center for Best
Practices & Council of Chief State School Officers, 2010) emphasizes the
notion that students in history classes should be readers of history. Perusing
these standards, one realizes that there are not only literacy standards for
English classes, but also reading and writing standards for history/social
studies, science, and technical subjects. These standards indicate that stu-
dents must learn to read history texts for understanding (e.g., “Determine
234 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
“I don’t know him very well, but [the author] is part of a right-wing
group of Southern conservatives who is a secessionist. I’m not sure that
the best model for thinking about Lincoln as a president is one that
comes from a racist. So I have my critical eyes up a little bit, so it’s a bit
of a stretch to be friendly to, so I wanted to make sure to read it fairly.”
The historian was sourcing, but also was evaluating his own potentially
biased perspective.
Historians also try to determine what perspectives may have been left
out. The historians we worked with strongly recommended that history
teachers help their students think about whose voices are not being heard
in the historical record. Are women’s, Native Americans’, or Vietnamese
perspectives being omitted? Why?
Historians also evaluate a text’s coherence. Are there gaps in the story
or in the logic? Are events out of chronological order? What claims is the
author making about the information, and what evidence does the author
present to back up those claims? Are they coherent or contradictory? Often
students are asked to read narrative history and they tend to view such text
as a series of ill-connected stories. Historians relate such stories in a way
that supports an argument, and showing students how to make connec-
tions among events can help them to uncover the argument.
Historians study change over time and use frameworks to guide that
study. Perhaps they are interested in the political ramifications of an event,
or its social, economic, artistic, religious, or technical causes and conse-
quences, or maybe they are interested in the interplay of several of those
frameworks. For example, consider historical accounts of the Little Rock
Nine, the group of African American high school students who spent a
year in what had been an all-white school in Arkansas, until Governor
Faubus used a loophole in the state law to close the school. The integration
of Central High School was affected by politics (e.g., Eisenhower used his
presidential powers to send in federal troops; some say Faubus’s resistance
was to protect his own political power, and not because he was racist)
and legality (e.g., Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, was
the impetus for integration and Faubus used states’ rights as a legal argu-
ment for resistance). However, these events were affected by social (e.g.,
Civil Rights Movement, KKK) and even technical (e.g., advent of televised
reporting) influences, too. By thinking in terms of frameworks, historians
can sharpen their analysis of change over time.
In addition to these frameworks, historians classify systems such as
governments into categories like feudalism or monarchy; they think the-
matically (exploring “processes of migration,” “expansion and retraction of
rights,” or “changes in economic systems,”), and they interpret the relation-
ships among events. Just because a series of events is chronological doesn’t
236 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
“My response is, first of all, I’m always kind of very suspicious and
weary of the kind of ‘great man in history’ approach, so I’m looking
kind of carefully at how the author is embedding this argument. In
other words, are they trying to undermine that great man in history,
are they addressing the problem and dealing with the problem, or are
they letting the problem just kind of fester without addressing it?”
argument—with a series of claims about the past and evidence for these
claims—even if history is written as a story. Read, for example, the follow-
ing excerpt from a history textbook:
could be challenging because language has changed over the years. If stu-
dents are reading old documents, they will find that the vocabulary and
writing style may be unfamiliar. Note the following excerpt from Ensign
Jeremy Lister, a British Officer who writes an account of the night of Paul
Revere’s ride:
such differences makes a point: accounts of the past are often based on
incomplete and contradictory evidence. A teacher can help students come
to their own conclusions that their history textbooks or the historical
movies they watch or the stories they have grown up learning (e.g., stories
about George Washington) are more uncomplicated and straightforward
than history could possibly be.
There are other ways to begin the process of reading like a historian.
In Project READI, one unit taught by history teachers started with pho-
tographs that students analyzed in relation to a question, “What caused
the conflict between the Native Americans and the settlers in the Black
Hills?” The photographs included some contextual information, such as
their dates, so they could be placed in chronological order. Students made
inferences that they would later confirm or disconfirm and asked ques-
tions that they would later answer through their reading. Reinforced in this
lesson were several ideas about history reading: chronology is important,
but it is not the same as causation; historians make hypotheses about the
past based on the evidence they have; historians use artifacts such as pho-
tographs and texts to construct their interpretations; and understanding
history is a process of inquiry into the past. We learned from that initial les-
son, however, that even when using photographs, students lacked enough
background knowledge to do much contextualization. In subsequent les-
sons we provided a short anchor text that set the stage for the question, and
that seemed adequate to improve subsequent inferences. The big idea here
is to help students see what history really is.
Sourcing
Have students find out about the author and think about what perspective
that author may have. Include a discussion about whose perspectives are
missing.
Contextualization
Support students’ ability to contextualize by asking them to notice the date;
if they don’t know anything about that time period, help them find out
about what was going on then. Guide them in making inferences about why
an author wrote as he or she did. One strategy that combines sourcing and
a kind of contextualization is called SOAPStone (Source, Occasion, Audi-
ence, Purpose, Subject, and Tone). In this activity, students have to think
Teaching History and Literacy 243
about the author’s stance, but also about when it was written (the Occa-
sion), whom it was written to (Audience), why it was written (Purpose),
and what the writing was about (Subject). As students read, they confirm
or disconfirm their hypotheses about an author’s perspective based on what
the author says and the way he or she says it (Tone).
Corroboration
Especially when using multiple texts, students should be engaged in com-
parison and contrast—looking for corroborated evidence and evidence that
is unique or contradicted. Students can make comparison–contrast charts
to keep track of this kind of information.
Historical Frameworks
Students can be tasked to look for political, economic, social, or legal tac-
tics. Then they can be asked to reason about the interplay of these frame-
works to answer questions such as: What tactics did Governor Faubus use
to keep Central High School from being integrated? What tactics did civil
rights activists use during the 1950s? How did these change in the 60s?
One way to help students to reason using historical frameworks is a graphic
organizer called a pattern organizer (See Figure 13.1). This organizer pro-
vides a visual way to display information using the frameworks.
Evaluations of Coherence
Help students notice when parts of a chronology are missing or out of
order, or when the reasoning doesn’t match the evidence. During a middle
grades observation, a teacher was teaching students to engage in history
discussions. He assigned roles so that one student looked into the source of
the material; another considered the context, and so on. As they read texts
about Custer’s Last Stand from different perspectives, they noticed that
the textbook version had presented the events out of chronological order,
making it seem as if one event had led to another, when that could not have
happened. The students were outraged and wrote the publisher about what
they had discovered.
Argumentation
Expose students to claims and evidence in different genres. A teacher
recently had students watch a PBS documentary on the Freedom Riders.
They watched it for a short while and wrote down the claims and evidence
they heard. Then they compared notes with a partner, watching a few min-
utes more. This exercise was more interesting than taking notes on names
244 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Name
Episode Pattern Organizer
Time
Include multiple causes if needed Include multiple effects if needed
Cause
Effect Effect
Cause Identify
all people
Cause Effect
and dates and provided insights about how documentaries pose arguments.
Later, in discussions about the documentarian’s decisions, the students
exhibited sophisticated ways of thinking. Textbook narratives are usually
full of claims without sufficient evidence, whereas popular history books
usually cite sources of evidence in some way. Explorations of these tradi-
tions of interpretation can spark high-level conversation. Also, if students
are reading to answer a historical question, having a multiple text com-
parison–contrast chart can provide fodder for writing their own essays.
Ask students to put the guiding questions on top, and list the name of the
different texts down the side. As students read the texts, they enter what-
ever evidence they found to answer the guiding question. When the stu-
dents are done reading, they make their own claims based on their thinking
about the trustworthiness of the source and its presentation of evidence.
The chart, then, becomes a large part of the planning support for student
essay writing.
a sense, students are reading like detectives, looking for clues to an author’s
perspective, claims, evidence, and tone, and placing the text within a larger
group of texts to get a more in-depth and complicated view of the past.
Students must learn to do this independently, but initially they will need
support. The challenge for teachers is to support them when they have dif-
ficulty without telling them what the text means. If students struggle with
a key vocabulary term, lead them to try to get to the meaning themselves
before telling them. Ask questions to lead students to higher levels of think-
ing. A high school history teacher admitted this was the hardest thing for
her to do. Like most history teachers, she loved her subject matter, and got
so excited about it that she wanted to tell them all about her insights before
they had a chance to have any of their own.
Conclusion
The fundamental idea of disciplinary literacy is that texts are not read or
written in the same ways, and that each discipline has its own rules of
evidence and ways of using language. The only way students are likely to
learn to be literate in these specialized disciplinary ways is through a kind
of apprenticeship that brings them into participation in the discipline rather
than as just an observer or a consumer. If students are to be sophisticated
readers of history, they need to understand what historians are trying to do,
and they need to be introduced to the nature of vocabulary in history or the
ways sentences work or how narratives serve as implicit arguments or why
we need to think about authors as we read. Research shows that engaging
246 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Connection:
Connection:
Author’s argument:
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248 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Leslie S. Rush
todd F. Reynolds
249
250 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Instructional Techniques
That Build Motivation to Read
One important key for addressing the needs of struggling readers in English/
language arts classrooms is recognizing the impact of motivation to read—or
lack of motivation to read—on students. According to McRae and Guthrie
(2009), students who avoid reading an assigned text usually have a reason
for this avoidance. The reason may be one of skill; alternatively, it may
be one of motivation. Research on motivation has shown us that inter-
nal or intrinsic motivations to read, such as seeking understanding, feeling
successful, and finding enjoyment in reading, are connected with reading
achievement. Likewise, external motivations—such as grades, require-
ments, and assignments—are not connected with reading achievement
(Guthrie & Coddington, 2009).
McRae and Guthrie (2009) describe a set of classroom practices that
are designed to help build students’ motivation to read, including providing
relevance, choice, opportunities for success, opportunities for collabora-
tion, and opportunities for students’ mastery of content knowledge. In this
Literacy Support in English/Language Arts Classrooms 251
section of the chapter, we review those practices and provide examples that
are specific to English/language arts classrooms.
Relevance
Teachers who are aware of their students’ interests and cultural backgrounds
can choose activities, experiences, and texts that students will be interested
in and will enjoy. When students find that the reading they are engaged in
touches on something they understand, on a theme that affects them, or
on their own cultural backgrounds, they are more likely to persist with
the class reading. As students experience repeated opportunities to read
something that they find relevant, they will begin to see reading itself as
enjoyable. In English classes, therefore, looking for relevance means choos-
ing texts with which students are likely to connect. For example, teachers
who provide their students with young adult novels such as Sharon Flake’s
The Skin I’m In, Sandra Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street, or Lisa
Klein’s Ophelia, give students the opportunity to explore literature that is
compelling, complex, and beautiful, but also relevant. The International
Reading Association and the National Council of Teachers of English col-
laborate to provide resources for teachers at ReadWriteThink.org, where
teachers unfamiliar with young adult literature can find book recommen-
dations for adolescent readers, such as Jennifer Buehler’s podcasts (www.
readwritethink.org/parent-afterschool-resources/podcast-series/text-mes-
sages-recommendations-adolescent-30214.html). One English teacher of
our acquaintance asks students to research local history and present their
findings at a local museum, with the community invited to participate.
Thrilled to engage in such relevant study, students peruse historical docu-
ments, interview senior citizens, and talk with their neighbors about issues
and events that are truly relevant because they take personal ownership.
Choice
Teachers who provide students with meaningful, appropriate choices
send the message to students that their opinions and preferences matter.
What might students be given choice in? According to McRae and Guthrie
(2009), teachers might offer choices on such decisions as the topic of study,
what reading materials to use, how student work will be assessed, the order
of activities, social arrangements, and procedural sequences, among oth-
ers. When we think about giving students choices in English classes, the
opportunities are endless. For example, on the larger end of the choice
scale, a teacher might ask students to choose one of three to four novels to
study in small groups, or students may choose the members of their small
group or how the novel study will be evaluated. At the smaller end of the
252 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
choice scale, a teacher might give students options for responding to texts
(e.g., students can respond in a paragraph or in a bulleted list), or whether
they wish to work alone or with a partner. In large or small ways, giving
students the opportunity to make their own choices affirms that they mat-
ter as individuals, and these opportunities can help students to see the texts
and tasks in English classes in a positive light.
students respond, the teacher judges the student response as either correct
or incorrect, and then moves on. Although this well-known cycle can ensure
that classroom discussions are both manageable and content focused, the
bulk of the work of critical thinking, analysis, and synthesis is always being
undertaken by the teacher, not the students; the teacher also maintains com-
plete academic and interpretive authority and keeps the dominant power
structure in place (Neal, 2008). So how might teachers move away from this
cycle of teacher-dominated discussion and incorporate authentic dialogue
that will both engage students and encourage literacy development?
Lawrence and Snow (2011), in their review of research on discussion
in the classroom, suggest four strategies that teachers can use to facilitate
authentic discussion that will help students build stronger comprehension
skills. First, teachers can create a situation in which students have more
interpretive authority, establishing a classroom with a diversity of perspec-
tives as students feel the ability to contribute to the interpretation of the
text instead of having an interpretation given to them by the teacher. Sec-
ond, the teacher can surrender control over who speaks and when they
speak. This can be done by having students lead discussion, or by having
an open format not based on raising hands. The teacher will need to create
the expectations for this kind of discussion, but when students rely on the
ebb and flow of the discussion instead of being called on by the teacher,
the dialogue can be more fluid and genuine. Nystrand (2006) describes this
dialogic classroom as containing more “conversational turns” instead of
teacher questions, allowing all participants in the room to add ideas and
thoughts to the discussion (pp. 399–400).
Third, teachers can control the guiding topic by focusing on a specific
strategy or purposefully chosen questions that students can answer. This
gives the discussion a focus, a purpose. Fourth, teachers should use open-
ended and genuine questions, which Lawrence and Snow (2011) describe
as “ones worthy of discussion and ones on which opinions can legitimately
differ” (p. 331). The development of open-ended questions helps teach-
ers move away from the IRE format because the questions do not have
one specific answer that can be found in the text. Instead, these questions
require interpretation and discussion and can have multiple answers that
the students can argue with and discuss. For example, why questions typi-
cally require interpretations into character or author motives. The question
strategy discussed later in this chapter can help guide teachers in authentic
questioning.
Opening the classroom to discussion can lead to tension as students
and teachers voice their possible disagreement over different interpretations
of the text. Nystrand (2006) argues that teachers should embrace this dis-
agreement, knowing that the discourse developed by competing perspec-
tives contributes to sophisticated comprehension (p. 399). While dialogue
with disagreement may be difficult to begin and maintain, it is crucial for
Literacy Support in English/Language Arts Classrooms 255
Strategy Instruction
in English/Language Arts Classrooms
Even with methods to both motivate students and give them a voice in the
classroom, teachers still face the question of how to help students more
directly to develop their comprehension abilities as they read the assigned
literature for the class. Strategy instruction can be one of the answers teach-
ers need in order to help their students. The goal of strategy instruction
is to teach students the kinds of reading strategies that good readers of
literary texts use naturally, with the idea that students’ use of these strate-
gies will eventually become automatic, and that students will be able to
successfully transfer the use of the strategy to other texts and to other con-
texts. Research has demonstrated that strategy instruction has a positive
impact on students’ comprehension performance (Duke & Carlisle, 2011;
Duke, Pearson, Strachan & Billman, 2011; Pressley, 2000; Wilkinson &
Son, 2011). Wilkinson and Son (2011) show that “when implemented well,
[strategy instruction] produces robust effects on measures of comprehen-
sion, including standardized tests” (p. 364, emphasis added). The key,
according to the authors, is quality implementation.
Unfortunately, since the concept of strategy instruction has been
implemented in different ways since the early 1970s (Pressley, 2000), school
administrators and policy makers have tried to centralize the approach,
leading to possible unintended consequences (Duke et al., 2011). Strategy
instruction can become too mechanistic, with teachers and testing focus-
ing on the strategy as the goal as opposed to the comprehension of the
text; it can also become more difficult than the actual text, trapping stu-
dents in “introspective nightmares” of metacognition (Wilkinson & Son,
2011, p. 360). Strategy instruction can become scripted, rigid, and inflex-
ible (Duke et al., 2011), leaving students confused as to how to actually
use the strategies independently. However, these are cautionary tales, and
studies demonstrate that quality strategy instruction can work well (Press-
ley, 2000).
While the research is still unclear as to why strategy instruction helps
students, Wilkinson and Son (2011) provide two possible explanations.
Strategy instruction may succeed because of its commitment to active
engagement with the text. It may also succeed because of its focus on dia-
logue about the text. Each of these reasons involves a layer of application
to strategy instruction. By actively engaging students with the text through
strategies, teachers ask students to think about what they read, to process
it more than simply looking for facts to answer multiple-choice questions.
By creating opportunities for genuine dialogue about the text, teachers give
students voice, but they also require students to support and defend their
interpretations, and to argue with others. These two methods are crucial
when implementing strategy instruction.
258 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Duke et al. (2011) give two more qualifications for quality strategy
instruction. First, teachers should help students learn “when, why, and
how to apply strategies” (p. 68). This is not a rigid and scripted instruction
meant to apply universally, but a localized and specific instruction on how
to use strategies with the text being read and discussed in the classroom.
Second, teachers should demonstrate to students that using the right strat-
egy at the right time can make the difference between understanding the
text and not understanding the text. In other words, the use of the strate-
gies depends on the needs of the individual student; using the wrong strat-
egy, one that does not address the student’s comprehension problem, will
not help that student, but using the right strategy, one that does address the
problem, will. A program or a script will not be able to determine which
one is correct, but a student, well taught in a variety of strategies, will be
able to apply the appropriate strategy.
Another area of difficulty in strategy instruction is the definition
of strategy. Teachers are usually confronted with two terms when deal-
ing with comprehension: skills and strategies. Sometimes they are used as
synonyms, and sometimes they are used to describe very different things.
Afflerbach, Pearson, and Paris (2008) work on both defining the terms
and separating them so that teachers can focus specifically on the kind of
instruction that students need. According to them, strategies are “deliber-
ate, goal-directed attempts to control and modify the reader’s efforts to
decode text, understand words, and construct meanings of text” (p. 368).
Skills, on the other hand, are defined as “automatic actions that result in
decoding and comprehension with speed, efficiency, and fluency and usually
occur without awareness of the components or control involved” (p. 368).
The difference is between deliberate and automatic actions that readers use
when attempting to comprehend a text. When a reader has difficulty with a
text and chooses to apply the questioning technique, he is using a strategy,
a conscious method used to try to find meaning in the text. However, the
same reader may instantly visualize the scene being described, automati-
cally using a skill to continue to process the text.
As readers gain competence with strategies, they may become more
automatic; as readers encounter more difficult texts, what once was auto-
matic may become more deliberate. Readers can move back and forth
between strategy and skill, and, for the reader and the teacher, it is not
necessarily important which one it is for that reader since the distinction
between the two is fluid (Afflerbach et al., 2008). However, the goal is to
constantly move students to more self-directed and automatic use of strate-
gies, which will help them understand and comprehend more complex texts
(Afflerbach et al., 2008; Duke & Carlisle, 2011).
Quality strategy instruction, then, focuses on the deliberate methods
that readers use in order to process the text. Reviews of research conducted
Literacy Support in English/Language Arts Classrooms 259
by Pressley (2000) and Duke et al. (2011) each describe some of the most
successful strategies. While all the strategies mentioned can be quality
tools for teachers, five strategies consistently appear in the research: ques-
tioning, summarizing, monitoring and clarifying, activating prior knowl-
edge, and setting a purpose. To implement quality strategy instruction
in the language arts classroom, teachers can begin with these strategies,
discussing them with the students and having the students apply them to
the texts.
Questioning
Questioning as a strategy should focus on moving beyond the literal level
in the text. Pressley (2000) focuses on “why-questioning,” with students
pulling in prior knowledge to answer the questions and connect the mean-
ings in the text to previous learning. He demonstrates a tactic of asking
why a fact in a nonfiction text made sense (p. 553); however, the strategy
of creating authentic questions can be used equally well for fiction and
poetry texts. Why does a character choose to do or not do something?
Why does the poet end the line with this word or choose this metaphor
to represent something? As teachers, we use authentic questions to start
discussions. Part of teaching this strategy is having students do it by them-
selves, asking these kinds of questions as they read, and as they come up
with them. A second part of this strategy is working on answering the
questions, something that can be done individually, in small-group dis-
cussions, in large-group discussions, or even in written assignments. The
Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for Speaking and Listening ask
students to “pose and respond to questions” (National Governors Asso-
ciation [NGA] Center for Best Practices & Council of Chief State School
Officers [CCSSO], 2010, 6.1.c). By 12th grade, students should be able to
question others’ comments in order to “clarify, verify, or challenge” those
viewpoints (NGA & CCSSO, 2010, 11–12.1.c). Valuing the questions as
a way to understand the text, though, and not just as an exercise in class,
requires engagement with the questions in some way. Asking students to
develop their own questions about a text encourages ownership; engaging
in discussion around students’ own questions provides a means to move
away from recitation-style talk into the kind of collaborative, authentic
dialogue that promotes literacy skills.
Summarizing
Summarizing is mentioned specifically in the CCSS for reading, with stu-
dents being required to “provide a summary of the text distinct from per-
sonal opinions or judgments” in sixth grade (NGA & CCSSO, 2010, 6.2),
260 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
and to “provide an objective summary of the text” (NGA & CCSSO, 2010,
11–12.2) in 11th and 12th grades. Working with students on succinct sum-
marizing will help them to grasp the content and understand the mate-
rial. Frey, Fisher, and Hernandez (2003) explain the collaborative generat-
ing interaction between schemata and text (GIST) strategy, along with an
example of how to scaffold the instruction. To use the GIST strategy, teach-
ers break the text into small sections. At the end of each section, teacher
modeling or group work lead to the crafting of a one-sentence summary. At
the end of the text, the collection of one-sentence summaries serves as the
beginning of the summary of the entire text. Beers (2003) introduces the
“someone wanted but so” (SWBS) method of summarizing fiction. After a
section of text, the writer chooses a character (someone); the sentence con-
tinues with what that character wants (wanted), a potential complication to
what the character wants (but), and then the resolution to that complication
(so). For example, from The Scarlet Letter, a SWBS statement could read:
“Hester wants to remove the letter, but Pearl doesn’t recognize her when
Hester removes it, so Hester puts the letter back on.” The process can be
repeated for different characters, or for different “wants.” These are only
two possible strategies, but they can provide some guidance as teachers
think about how to bring summarization into their classroom, and to their
students’ experiences as they read.
al., 2011; Pressley, 2000; Wilkinson & Son, 2011). Commonly referred to
as explicit teaching, or gradual release of responsibility, this instructional
model provides students with the guidance they need in order to fully grasp
and apply the strategies that can help them comprehend difficult texts.
The first two steps, explain and model, typically go together since they
are based on teacher talk. The teacher first explains what the strategy is,
why it is used, and what it is for. Then the teacher demonstrates how the
strategy is used in a selection of the text. The next step is to involve the
students in collaborative and guided practice, encouraging them to use the
strategy with another portion of the text and then discuss it with a group
and with the class. During this time, the teacher is listening and interacting,
providing feedback on how the students are using the strategy, and prompt-
ing them to continue or modify what they are doing.
At this point, it is important for teachers to remember to meet the
needs of their students. If their students are familiar with the strategies
already, then the explanation and modeling can be very quick, and the
guided practice can be more advanced. However, if the strategies are new
to the students, or if students are demonstrating difficulty in comprehen-
sion that the strategies can help, then the explanation and modeling can
be longer and more detailed, and the guided practice can be very focused.
The final stage is independent application, having the students read on
their own and apply the strategy. The goal in this independent application,
though, is not the strategy, but comprehension of the text through strategy
use. Teachers should set the purpose, including the strategy, but should
always relate the use of the strategy back to the meaning of the text.
This is where the gradual release of responsibility is so important. Duke
et al. (2011) found that teachers either moved very quickly from the mod-
eling to independent practice, asking students to do more than they were
prepared to do, or they spent too much time on the guided practice, not let-
ting the students get to the independent practice that is crucial for students
to learn how to self-regulate their use of the strategies. There is no universal
way to determine how long to spend on modeling and guided practice or
when to move into the independent practice stage. Instead, teachers need to
listen to their students and see what they are producing and where they are
having difficulty. Essentially, if students seem to have no problem, teachers
can move more into the independent stage; if students seem to have dif-
ficulty, teachers should stay in the modeling/guided practice stage. Since
strategy use is recursive and happens all year (Pressley, 2000), instruction
on a strategy may move back and forth depending on the text. With one
text, the class could demonstrate quality use of strategies to comprehend
the text, but with a different text they could have problems applying the
strategies to arrive at an understanding. The teacher needs to be attuned to
the students and should be prepared to adjust as the year progresses.
Literacy Support in English/Language Arts Classrooms 263
“Today, while we’re reading this chapter, I want you to think about
monitoring and clarifying, which is when you think about whether or
not you understand the text, and then, if you aren’t, doing something
to try to understand it. In order to get the most out of this chapter,
you need to be aware of whether you understand, and this strategy
can help.”
The next step is to move straight into modeling. The teacher could say:
“For example, turn to page 33. When I read this page silently, as I like
to do, I didn’t understand any of it. I got to the bottom of the page
and realized that I had no idea what Jim is saying. So I had to adjust. I
decided to read this page out loud to see if that would work.”
The teacher could then read a paragraph out loud, articulating afterward,
“You know, that made a lot more sense. I can hear the text better, and I
can understand Jim more.” The teacher could then move the students into
some guided practice:
“What I want you to do now is get into your groups, and take turns
reading paragraphs. Make sure everyone gets a chance to read some
of Jim’s speech. After each paragraph, take a minute to see if you all
understood what was said. I want to you to read to the end of the chap-
ter, and then we’ll talk about it as a class.”
As the class continued reading this novel, the strategy use would move more
to the students’ independent reading, with the teacher always checking to
make sure that students understand. The goal, though, is to make sure that
they understand the strategy, and that they are using the strategy to com-
prehend the text, not just as an exercise in class. With that goal in mind,
and with the gradual release of responsibility, students can start to take
more ownership of their metacognitive reading practices and become more
self-regulated readers.
264 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Conclusion
Teaching English/language arts in junior high school and high school set-
tings is a complex and fascinating task; when we include the need to teach
reading skills as part of teaching the literature of our discipline, the task
becomes infinitely more complex. Our hope is that the suggestions in this
chapter provide English/language arts teachers with a concrete place to
begin intertwining instruction that will motivate, engage, and provide
structure for students who have not been successful in becoming lifelong
readers with the study of both classic and young adult literature.
1. The next time you lead a classroom discussion, ask a colleague to assist in
videotaping or perhaps observing the interaction among you and your stu-
dents. Does the discussion follow the IRE pattern described in this chapter?
If so, how might you develop discussion questions and techniques that will
improve the flow of your discussion?
2. Examine one of the texts that students in your classes read. How might you
integrate the suggestions for dialogue, motivation, and strategy instruction
with your instruction on this text?
3. Reflect on how strategy instruction has been presented in your school,
through professional development or policies. What have you read in this
chapter or in other resources that could influence your use of strategy
instruction?
References
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cHaPter 15
Heather K. Sheridan-thomas
The purpose of this chapter is to suggest ways that middle and high school
teachers can assist struggling readers to read and comprehend textbooks.
Specifically, this chapter:
The advent of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) places new
demands on adolescent literacy research and instruction. While interest
in adolescent multiple literacies remains strong (Hagood, Alvermann &
266
Assisting Struggling Readers with Textbook Comprehension 267
This chapter focuses on assisting readers who struggle with academic lit-
eracy generally and reading textbooks in particular. The phrase struggling
readers has replaced terms such as “at-risk” or “below-level” students as
a more respectful way of describing the situated nature of the challeng-
ing interaction between reader and text. The struggles that these readers
encounter in school can be seen as socially constructed—by how schools
are organized and scheduled, by assumptions that are made about home
life and school abilities, by a curriculum that is often devoid of connections
to students’ lives, and by texts that may be too difficult for students to read
(Triplett, 2007).
We all struggle with some types of reading (Alvermann, Phelps, &
Ridgeway, 2007), so it is important to note that adolescents who have
difficulty comprehending textbooks are often proficient with other litera-
cies. Some are competent users of technology (O’Brien, 2001), and others
Assisting Struggling Readers with Textbook Comprehension 269
Engaging Readers
Because struggling readers are often disengaged readers, and textbooks
are rarely inherently engaging, involving students in prereading activities
is a crucial first step to improving comprehension. Initial interpretations of
the CCSS suggested that in order to increase independent reading of texts,
teacher guided prereading activities should be eliminated altogether (Shana-
han, 2012/2013, p. 12). The revised Publishers Criteria clarified this stance,
noting that “Care should be taken that initial questions are not so overly
broad and general that they pull students away from an in-depth encounter
with the specific text or texts; rather, strong questions will return students
to the text to receive greater insight and understandings. The best questions
will motivate students to dig in and explore further—just as texts should
be worth reading, so questions should be worth answering” (Coleman &
Pimentel, 2012, p .8).
Engagement has been shown to be enhanced by helping students
understand the relevance of texts; by providing some degree of choice
(in texts, tasks or both); and by increasing students’ sense of self-efficacy
(Guthrie, Klaudia, & Ho, 2013). There are a number of prereading strat-
egies that engage readers by increasing the relevance of the text, at the
same time as they motivate readers to look for supporting evidence in the
Assisting Struggling Readers with Textbook Comprehension 271
motivated to read the textbook and see whether their position is supported.
Another engaging prereading strategy is problem posing or “establishing
problematic perspectives” (Vacca & Vacca, 2008, p. 191). The content-area
teacher creates a problem scenario designed to pique students’ curiosity
and interest. Students discuss the problem before they read, brainstorming
solutions or voicing their reactions. As students read the textbook passage,
they have the immediate purpose of using the information to solve the given
problem. A “comprehension canopy” (Vaughn et al., 2013) can also create
relevance for readers by providing a multilayered overarching unit question
that focuses students and provides a purpose for reading. This unit ques-
tion is revisited after each new reading to reflect on new information gained
and on how students’ responses to the questions may have changed.
Students’ sense of text relevance can also be enhanced by making con-
nections to themes or media types that readers are familiar with and enjoy.
Because adolescents who struggle with academic reading may be avid con-
sumers of one or more forms of popular culture texts (Alvermann, Moon,
& Hagood, 1999; Moje et al., 2008), one way to motivate struggling stu-
dents to read textbooks is to provide a popular culture bridge. Teachers can
create a “text twin” set (Camp, 2000) of a popular culture and a textbook
reading on a topic. Students can be introduced to the topic through engag-
ing with familiar media forms and popular culture materials such as songs,
magazine or newspaper articles, videos/DVDs, trading cards, or video
games. They can then be guided to read the textbook selection, looking for
content similarities and differences between the popular culture source and
the textbook. For example, Xu (2005) suggested using Yu-Gi-Oh! trading
cards to focus on Egyptian deities and related symbols. Later students read
about Egyptian religion and the origin of the symbols, completing a com-
parison chart with what they knew from the trading cards.
Going beyond text twins to create full “text sets” (Lent, 2012) builds
in choice as well as relevance. A text set is “a collection of materials, usually
created by a teacher (or media specialist), composed of diverse resources on
a specific subject, genre, or theme” (Lent, 2012, p. 148). Text sets designed
to motivate adolescent readers can include information from high-inter-
est periodicals as well as digital sources. Engagement is maximized when
visual and even auditory texts are included along with print texts. Pro-
viding texts at varied reading levels provides access to the full range of
adolescent readers, and even students reading at higher levels may enjoy
the visuals and themes of well-chosen topical picture books. Students can
become part of the creation of a text set when they are asked to preview a
textbook chapter and think about what texts might be included (what types
and subjects or specific texts they might contribute) (Lent, 2012, p. 155).
This activity provides an engaging reason to preview the chapter. When
a course textbook becomes part of a text set, students are provided with
opportunities to compare information and presentation styles across texts.
Assisting Struggling Readers with Textbook Comprehension 273
Use of texts sets can also provide practice in the critical CCSS reading skill
of gathering evidence from multiple text sources.
An often overlooked source of motivation for reading textbooks is
critical literacy (Luke, 2000). Focusing on critical literacy can raise the
relevance level while also addressing the CCSS focus on cognitive engage-
ment and higher-order reading/thinking skills such as synthesizing, analyz-
ing, and evaluating text information (Calkins et al., 2012; Conley, 2011).
Teachers know that nearly all textbooks include some erroneous informa-
tion (Gould, 1991) and that no textbook reflects all of the possible views
and opinions on a topic (Loewen, 1996). Textbook authors write from
viewpoints that privilege some voices and silence others. Rather than try-
ing to hide this reality, it can be used to motivate adolescents, who are at
a prime age for questioning authority, to read their textbooks with a criti-
cal eye. For example, students can be encouraged to look at whose point
of view is represented in a history textbook and whose voices are silenced
(Wolk, 2003).
Teacher-Guided Comprehension
Once students have been introduced to a strategy through explicit instruc-
tion, multiple opportunities to practice the strategy can be provided through
teacher-created guides. The major focus of reading guides in a content-area
class remains on the content—on helping students comprehend the most
important concepts and related details in a textbook section. At the same
time, students using the guides are practicing textbook reading strategies.
Effective textbook reading guides model the way a good reader would use
the strategy and also provide explicit reminders of strategy steps. Because
struggling readers are often disengaged readers, textbook guides need to
be constructed to promote engagement. Interactive reading guides (IRGs)
(Buehl, 2009) involve students in responding to questions or statements
about the content of the text, using textbook organization to extract impor-
tant information, making connections between textbook information and
prior knowledge, and reflecting on deeper meanings. Teachers design IRGs
to focus on a particular text section, guiding students to use and practice
effective literacy strategies as well as focusing them on the most important
content.
These guides are interactive in two ways: they encourage individual
students to interact thoughtfully with the text, and they can also guide
cooperative group sharing and discussion around a piece of text. The best
reading guides resist student attempts to use “search and destroy” tactics
for finding answers without reading or thinking about the text. IRGs can
be designed to focus on one or several text reading strategies. An example
of an IRG focused on comprehension at and beyond the literal level is dis-
cussed below.
Two crucial skills for comprehending textbooks are determining
importance and making inferences. Harvey and Goudvis (2007) define
determining importance as the ability to identify essential ideas and dif-
ferentiate between these key ideas and less important ideas when reading.
Inference can be defined as using text information plus prior knowledge
to draw conclusions, make judgments, and form interpretations (Keene &
Zimmermann, 1997). One instructional method that lends itself to help-
ing students do both of these is question–answer relationships, or QARs
(Raphael, 1986; Raphael & Au, 2005).
278 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
FIGURE 15.4. Example guide using QARs to focus on inferences and text
structure.
279
280 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
Conclusion
1. Review a textbook that is currently used in your content area. Use the ques-
tions in Figure 15.2 to determine how considerate the text is. Decide how
desirable this text is for use in your classroom. What weaknesses would you
have to overcome through targeted lessons?
2. Design an activity that would motivate students to read a section of a text-
book in your content area. You can design an anticipation guide or create
a problem that can be solved using text information. You may also create a
matched text set with one or more pieces of popular culture or real-world
text (widely defined to include music, film, TV, video games, websites, as
well as print text) to motivate students and help them connect to related
prior knowledge.
3. Choose a section of text from a textbook in your content area. Make a list
of the important content points you want students to get from their reading
of the text section. Think about which reading strategies students need to
effectively learn those main points. Also notice the text features that might
help students choose and comprehend important text ideas. Now create an
IRG that will help students use the strategies and text features to understand
the most important information in the chosen textbook section.
4. Different schools have developed different ways to organize instruction in
textbook and other content-area literacy strategies so that students receive
284 DEVELOPING DISCIPLINARY LITERACIES
both the explicit introduction and the amount of ongoing guided practice
they need. Think about how teachers are organized in your school (or make
up a fictitious school and organization)—whether it is into grade-level teams
or cross-grade departments. What kinds of conversations would need to
occur for content-area teachers in your school to agree to a plan for intro-
ducing and reinforcing textbook reading strategies? What might such a plan
look like?
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Part iV
addressing Program
and Policy issues
cHaPter 16
multimodality
and literacy learning
Integrating the Common Core State
Standards for English Language Arts
Fenice B. Boyd
Andrea L. tochelli
291
292 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
new learning (and teaching) standards across the curriculum; how class-
rooms are becoming increasingly diverse with varied student populations,
languages, and academic abilities; and what multimodality adds to teach-
ing and learning, students’ educational experiences are becoming progres-
sively richer. The Common Core State Standards for English Language
Arts & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects
(CCSS; National Governors Association [NGA] Center for Best Practices
& Council of the Chief State School Officers [CCSSO], 2010) for example,
present learning goals that are aligned from kindergarten through 12th
grade. These goals center on students’ reading, writing, language, speak-
ing, and listening skills to position students to be prepared for college and
careers. In addition, text complexity and close reading while using evidence
to support reasoning is one prevailing tenet of the CCSS. As noted in the
document:
or modes assist in meaning making, and different modes have their own
potential (Moss, 2003). For instance, gesture, gaze, image, movement,
music, speech, and sound effects are all modes that propose opportunities
to interpret and construct meanings (Jewitt & Kress, 2003). Whether we
are admiring vibrant colors of leaves during fall, smelling the fragrance of
spring flowers, or analyzing the emotions evoked from the sound effects of
a movie, multimodality plays a role in the sense we make of these modes
and in how we rely on them as ways of being and knowing. Based on these
ideas, meaning making in schools should not rely solely on writing and
reading print-based texts but be expanded to include reading multiple text
forms as well as composing various text types (e.g., Boyd & Howe, 2006;
Jewitt, 2008; Shanahan, 2013a, 2013b).
However, at the same time that multimodality is taking center stage for
21st-century teaching and learning, teachers, teacher educators, and stu-
dents are faced with an unprecedented national education policy that at first
glance assumes to privilege print-based texts. Responding to the current
national focus on college and career readiness, in 2010, 45 states and the
District of Columbia adopted the CCSS. Full implementation of the stan-
dards is under way, and teachers and students all across the United States
anxiously await the release of assessments that will be produced by two
consortia—Smarter Balanced and PARCC (see www.smarterbalanced.org
and www.parcconline.org)—and aligned with the standards.
Yet before the CCSS were ever adopted, many teachers employed rig-
orous teaching standards and expectations for themselves and their stu-
dents. In this chapter we narrate the story of Deborah and her seventh-
grade students to portray a multimodal approach to literacy teaching and
learning. Our portrayal demonstrates how—7 years before the standards
were released and adopted—Deborah taught her students in a way that
addressed many of the precise outcomes required by the CCSS through
the integration of multimodal texts. That is, through one curriculum unit,
we demonstrate when and how seventh-grade English language arts (ELA)
standards were integrated into Deborah’s instructional practice.
Classroom Portrait
Deborah begins class by directing students to the chapters read for home-
work.
Deborah: Last night you read three chapters [from Warriors Don’t
Cry, by Melba Pattillo Beals, 1994] because I wanted you to get
that whole first day and night in Melba’s life where they try to
go to school and were kept out by the soldiers. We’re going to be
looking first at a photograph and then at real film of this event
294 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
This vignette conveys how Deborah layered multiple texts for mean-
ing making with her students. What we find particularly poignant in this
example is how Deborah also connected a historical event to a then-cur-
rent event in her students’ lives. By doing so, Deborah helped her students
to think about the ways in which events are documented affect how we
understand and think about them in a modern context, how to consider the
importance of events in the time period in which they occurred, and what
documented images might mean 50 years in the future.
Multimodality is central to this narrative because it highlights how mul-
tiple pieces of history come together with different types of text to enhance
students’ conceptual understanding. Moss (2003) argued that multimodal-
ity offers the potential to exploit our understandings in different ways based
on the affordances and resistances that any mode offers and the use that is
made of multimodal resources in any given case. Furthermore, the learning
Multimodality and Literacy Learning 295
FIGURE 16.1. Hazel Bryan, Elizabeth Eckford, and adult protestors. Reprinted
with permission from the Arkansas Democrat Gazette.
Conceptual Understanding
and Multimodal Texts
the documentary changed the way Deborah’s students thought about the
incident with the chili and its historical significance.
The third text, a docudrama titled Crisis at Central High (Johnson,
1980) is based on the journal of Mrs. Huckaby, an English teacher and the
Dean of Girls at Central High School in 1957. This low-budget HBO docu-
drama depicts yet another perspective of the historical event and the only
one in which the Little Rock Nine are portrayed in the third person. Each
text shows a different perspective of Miniijean’s experience. While none of
the texts are in her voice, the memoir highlights how this event affected all
of the Little Rock Nine. The documentary Eyes on the Prize emphasizes
the event through two interviews and provides an additional context to the
many reactions to the chili incident. The docudrama in comparison overly
simplifies the event and shows how a telling from a particular perspec-
tive can mask the importance of real-life situations. Furthermore, Debo-
rah called the student’s attention to the fact that docudramas have actors,
directors, producers, and editors who decide how and what is portrayed in
film, and can silence some voices and perspectives—and highlight others—
in the process. Although Crisis at Central High is based on a diary kept
by Mrs. Huckaby, the film was edited. This became a central part of the
discussion as students became aware that what is left out of an account is
often just as important as what is told. How emotions get portrayed influ-
ences how events are perceived, remembered, and internalized.
These examples validate the significance of questioning, posing dilem-
mas, and wondering what is and is not represented in a text. It is important
to teach students that asking questions about a text is not an admission of
not knowing, but rather a powerful way of “reading” across multiple text
types multimodally. When students read texts without posing questions,
they may not be reading critically and thinking about what the design of
modes affords them in meaning making. In addition, these examples illus-
trate how CCSS RI.7.1—Cite several pieces of textual evidence to support
analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from
the text—was inherent in Deborah’s instructional approach. A memoir, a
documentary, and a docudrama (i.e., several pieces of textual evidence)
were all included in the lesson to support the microanalysis of a particular
incident (i.e., Minnijean and the chili incident) within a specific historical
event (i.e., the integration of Central High School).
In the next section, we turn to examine students’ multimodal connec-
tions across texts to explore how, when invited, they brought to the class-
room texts from their own lives to exhibit their conceptual understand-
ing of critical historical events. Deborah designed a culminating activity
that required the students to make multimodal textual connections to the
experiences of the Little Rock Nine by sharing different types of texts that
would support multiple perspectives of an event or issue. Students selected
movie clips, hip-hop, a canonical text, a different school integration story,
300 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
the Iraq War, and personal struggles with peers in instances of teasing to
make connections to issues they studied in Warriors Don’t Cry. Their final
presentations and papers conveyed critical perspectives about obstacles
faced when attempting to think analytically about events from multiple
perspectives.
Perhaps what was most striking in this classroom were the seventh graders’
personal responses to Melba and her experience. Students conveyed that
Melba was one of the bravest people they ever read about. Being bullied
and teased is not something they have to imagine; many middle school
students have experienced such harassment, albeit not to the degree of the
Little Rock Nine. But navigating obstacles in order to acquire an educa-
tion is not within their experiences. When they hear about daily, aggres-
sive harassment and physical abuse going unchecked in school, and when
they can visualize aspects of this type of harassment from a docudrama
and documentary, they empathize with Melba and other members of the
Little Rock Nine, about how difficult it would be to take the daily unre-
lenting abuse without retaliating. In students’ final inquiry projects, there
was greater depth to their conceptual understanding of the historical event
because they were allowed to layer texts multimodally from their own lives.
To examine the students’ writing about their multimodal artifacts, we have
divided their responses into three sections: personal connections, current
events, and popular culture.
Personal Connections
Lindsay’s personal connection to the experiences of the Little Rock Nine
was focused on teasing in middle school. She wrote, “My experience was
tough but Melba’s put her life in grave danger. She had to walk her halls
watching her back in fear of getting jumped, hurt, or killed. Even though
my middle school experience had strong effects on me, it was just boys
being stupid little boys. In Melba’s case she was being teased and harassed
by people who could seriously hurt her.” In her essay, Lindsay specifically
acknowledged the difference between what she endured versus Melba by
speaking of danger and “boys being stupid little boys.”
Like Lindsay, Tyrone also made a connection to the discriminatory
perceptions people hold, but discussed Melba’s experience as one removed
from his own. “At CHS [Central High School] she [Melba] had her human-
ity taken away from her and treated as the Other by the white people,
meaning they didn’t consider her another human being like themselves.
Multimodality and Literacy Learning 301
If you treat someone as the Other you don’t have to treat them with basic
decency. Nothing in my life connects because that has never happened to
me.” Tyrone critically noted how people from diverse backgrounds are
often “othered” as he capitalized Other in his discussion. Although not able
to sympathize with Melba, Tyrone showed understanding and the ultimate
consequence for looking at the color of one’s skin rather than attempting
to know the individual. These two examples are inclusive of CCSS Writ-
ing 7.2—Write informative/explanatory texts to examine a topic and con-
vey ideas, concepts, and information through the selection, organization,
and analysis of relevant content. Although Lindsay and Tyrone could never
imagine any schooling experiences such as those of the Little Rock Nine,
they wrote a personal narrative to convey past experiences with peers, in
which they articulated similarities and differences to empathize with the
experiences of Melba and her peers.
Popular Culture
Jamal selected an appropriate song from the hip-hop genre to bridge music
from his lifeworld to that of the Little Rock Nine. He wrote, “2Pac also
says in the beginning of his song ‘I see no changes.’ When Melba attended
Central High she saw no changes in how integration was getting better; if
anything it was getting worse and harder for her to survive in Central High.
Melba wants integration to work out for the sake of all the black people in
her city. She’s trying so hard to hold on and stay in central high but she sees
no changes in how kids are treating her, which she doesn’t want. She wants
them to get to know her and get to be good friends with her, which I think
is reasonable and if I were in her position that’s what I would do.” Grace
(2004) defines “culturally conscious hip-hop as oral text with lyrics and
messages that enlighten with social consciousness, engage with politicized
messages, and empower by instilling cultural and self-awareness” (p. 484),
and notes that some hip-hop genres are not suitable for the classroom and
may present risks for teachers and students. Deborah was not familiar with
rap or hip-hop, but discussed with students the appropriateness of lyrics.
Mo chose to make connections to movies from which he had learned
about race-related issues.
“In the movie remember the titans they tried to integrate a football team.
This started because of a new coach that was black in a white school.
The white players would not play for the team because they did not
want to play with the black players. They finally joined together. . . .
This is the same as Melba because of the white people of Central are
mad that these nine kids are coming into this all white school and
starting integration. Another connection is that Melba gets hurt just
302 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
like some of the players in remember the titans. Melba gets hurt in the
bathrooms, hallways, and in the classroom.”
Current Events
Still a different kind of connection made to Melba and the Little Rock Nine
was a connection to a current event. At the time Deborah implemented this
unit, the United States had just invaded Iraq. Earlier in this chapter, we
portrayed Deborah’s reference to the toppling down of Saddam Hussein’s
statue, and what that would mean 50 years in the future. Alexis extended
the event Deborah opened to all students and called attention to the dis-
crimination Muslims today might face in the United States. Alexis said,
“This connection is similar to Melba’s experience because the Muslims
in America today are treated exactly how the blacks were treated by the
whites in 1957. They are very much stereotyped because of what they look
like and what they believe in. Also the Muslims in the United States today
are the minority, just like the blacks were, so it is easier to pick on them.” In
Table 16.1 we present the students’ multiple text types. Table 16.2 exhibits
all multimodal texts Deborah used to teach students while studying War-
riors Don’t Cry.
Conclusion
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cHaPter 17
traveling together
over difficult ground
Negotiating Success with a Profoundly
Inexperienced Reader in an
Introduction to Chemistry Class
Cindy Litman
Cynthia Greenleaf
308
Success with a Profoundly Inexperienced Reader 309
Background Information
Students who meet the Standards readily undertake the close, atten-
tive reading that is at the heart of understanding and enjoying complex
works of literature. They habitually perform the critical reading nec-
essary to pick carefully through the staggering amount of information
available today in print and digitally. They actively seek the wide, deep,
and thoughtful engagement with high-quality literary and informational
texts that builds knowledge, enlarges experience, and broadens world-
views. They reflexively demonstrate the cogent reasoning and use of
evidence that is essential to both private deliberation and responsible
citizenship in a democratic republic. In short, students who meet the
Standards develop the skills in reading, writing, speaking, and listening
that are the foundation for any creative and purposeful expression in
language. (p. 3)
310 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
Meet Eduardo
inquiry and through reading science” that Will described as the goal for
his students.
Eduardo’s surprising turnaround was largely the result of a process
that we describe as “negotiating success.” Much of this negotiation between
Will and Eduardo took place in the context of ongoing classroom discus-
sions that gave Will a nuanced understanding of Eduardo’s identity as a
student, reader, and learner, as well as ongoing opportunities to engage and
mentor Eduardo and his classmates in the thinking, language, and literacy
practices of science. Will’s interactions with Eduardo occurred during con-
tent-area instruction that benefited Eduardo and his classmates. Indeed, in
this classroom where students had ongoing opportunities for teacher- and
peer-supported science literacy learning, we witnessed many shifts in many
students’ conceptions of reading and reading practices and in their identi-
ties as readers and students (Greenleaf et al., 2004). In order to situate
Eduardo’s story in its educational context, we now turn to a description of
Will Brown’s Introduction to Chemistry class.
Reading Apprenticeship
in Introduction to Chemistry
Metacognitive Conversation
Among the routines that supported students’ growth as science readers
and learners were the many opportunities Will offered his students to dis-
cuss the ideas and texts of chemistry. In Will’s classroom, conversational
routines included the preambles, expert groups and Team Reads described
in Table 17.1. These conversational routines generally began with individ-
ual reflection, then proceeded to small-group and whole-class discussion
before returning to the individual, providing opportunities for students to
revisit, revise, and deepen comprehension and content knowledge as well
as to practice and refine discipline-based thinking and reading processes.
Topics of these conversations were wide ranging—students might grapple
with a difficult concept or operation, connect new ideas to prior knowl-
edge, or discuss real-life applications of chemistry in a preamble; synthesize
and consolidate information and ideas from multiple sources in an expert
group; or tackle a particularly challenging section of text in a Team Read—
but they nearly always involved reading and text of some kind.
Eduardo’s Journey
Reading logs
The primary tool to support students’ reading of the textbook was a two-column I
Saw/I Thought reading log. In one column, students recorded what they “saw” in
the text; in the other, they recorded their thoughts—patterns they saw, questions
they had, connections they made to prior knowledge. The focus of the reading log
changed depending on the content, the demands of the text, and students’ increasing
academic literacy skills. In addition to supporting textbook reading, students also
used the double-entry I Saw/I Thought format to record and interpret observations
during labs.
Bringing reading into the classroom
Reading happened in the classroom. Because the students were not yet
independent readers of the complex science texts of chemistry, Will explained:
“We have to bring the reading into class, as well as the comprehension.” When
reading and conversations about reading materials took place in class, students’
comprehension problems and their thinking were in evidence, and the class could
work collaboratively to both build dispositions for problem solving and solve
comprehension problems with the text.
Team Reads
Team Reads were a modified version of Reciprocal Teaching (Palincsar & Brown,
1984) in which students alternately read a small section of text individually and
(continued)
316 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
Cooperative labs
Lab roles (facilitator, reader, editor, and resource person) involved facilitating,
rather than doing, each task. The “reader,” for example, coached teammates’ close
reading of procedural and informational texts associated with the lab investigation
and facilitated discussion—but team members shared responsibility for reading and
making sense of the material.
Inquiry
To apprentice students to the inquiry thinking and reasoning at the heart of science,
Will started the year focused on developing habits of observing and questioning.
He helped students acquire a language for identifying common types of science
questions (attention focusing, measuring and counting, comparing, action
prompting, problem posing, values reasoning) and coached his students to see the
connection between these question types and the types of inquiry that would be
needed to answer them (Raphael & McKinney, 1983). The spirit of inquiry was a
common thread binding literacy and science in the classroom.
ongoing opportunities for the class to explore social, personal, and cog-
nitive aspects of reading and doing science. During these conversations,
Eduardo expressed concern that the material was too hard, and Will
expressed confidence in Eduardo’s capabilities. Will shared strategies he
used to make science reading more interesting and comprehensible and
had students discuss what was easy, hard, interesting, and confusing for
them. The realization that reading science requires more effort from every-
one, including expert readers like Will, along with metacognitive reading
routines, helped Eduardo identify and address his confusions and increase
his confidence.
Metacognitive conversations surfaced Eduardo’s conceptions of
schooling and what it meant to be a good student—conceptions that
worked against his success—and put them on the table for negotiation. At
the beginning of the year, when Eduardo learned that students could use
their reading logs during tests, he snapped, “That’s cheating.” Metacogni-
tive conversations challenged Eduardo’s conception of reading proficiency
as a fixed trait and helped him see that even good readers improve with
practice and collaboration. Gradually, Eduardo came to see reading as a
tool for learning, rather than as an exam for separating good students from
bad. He came to value collaboration, both benefiting from and contributing
to his classmates’ learning.
Eduardo became increasingly willing to take risks as a reader and
learner. In late October, despite complaining that an upcoming lab was
“too hard,” Eduardo participated and found the lab doable, as Will had
predicted. When Eduardo completed his lab report early, Will, leveraging
Eduardo’s increasing confidence, gave him a related reading assignment
from the textbook, modeling how to use the “I Saw/I Thought” metacogni-
tive reading log. Although the double entry reading log was a well-estab-
lished classroom routine, Eduardo had neglected his log assignments and
was not yet proficient in its use. Eduardo read his textbook for the duration
of the class, making notes in his log. The following week, during expert
group reports on the lab, Eduardo was conspicuously engaged, serving as
spokesperson for his group. He expressed interest in others’ reports, asking
one group a sophisticated question about measurement. When Will polled
the class about who had their reading logs to use for a class discussion,
only Eduardo had his. As he was leaving class, Eduardo asked Will for
permission to take home his reading log, despite the fact that there was no
assigned reading. He insisted, “I want to read tonight.”
Will’s grading policy, which awarded up to 80% credit for late assign-
ments, was also instrumental in Eduardo’s transformation. By allowing
students to make up late work, the policy held students to high standards
but did not undermine the motivation of students, like Eduardo, who got
off to a bad start.
318 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
for its own sake. He chatted informally with Will, asking questions about
chemistry—even when they weren’t on the exam—and did extra reading
for homework.
“I went to Dr. Brown, you know, and I seen that he cared for my grades
and helping me out. When he told me I can get my grades up, I tried it
and I seen it go up, so then I thought, from there on I said, you know,
‘If I can do that, I might as well try harder.’ And I started trying harder
in school, in all my classes. . . . He just told me, ‘Come, second lunch,’
you know, ‘and we’ll talk it out.’ Then we did labs I missed and it got
my grade up. Dr. Brown made me realize you can [catch up]. So I thank
him a lot.
“Then Samuel [a teammate] helped me. I seen him, you know,
working on this in class, on the labs. And since he was my partner
for the whole year, he helped me out. We had some quiz, and the day
before, he gave me a little sheet and he told me, you know, ‘Just study
this and you should get a good grade, just study.’ And I started doing
the preambles and he helped me out when I didn’t understand it. . . .
When I got my quiz back, I seen I got an A, I thanked him, and from
there on, just started working hard.”
When asked if there had been particular things Dr. Brown had done
that year to support his reading of chemistry, Eduardo responded:
“When I had my first [reading log] and I tried it, you know, I did it with
[my teammate] Samuel in class, you know. And he helped me realize
it wasn’t hard, you know. And one day, I came during lunch and Dr.
Brown helped me with what you’re supposed to do, so from there,
from both of their help, you know, I tried it at home and it came out. I
got an A on it, you know.”
Success with a Profoundly Inexperienced Reader 321
Eduardo also expressed his preference for reading science: “You know,
I rather read this than the English book. See, science seems interesting to
me, so, you know, so I like to read.”
Negotiating Success
LEARNER DISPOSITIONS
Conclusion
such tasks as is the case with so many students in our secondary schools.
By offering the construct of “negotiating success,” we hope to contribute
to efforts to better understand how teachers might translate their commit-
ment to equity into classroom practices that help all students achieve high
levels of academic literacy. Moreover, we hope to move the discussion of
adolescent literacy development beyond a focus on school structures and
instructional strategies toward the quality of interactions in classrooms
that support and foster new and more resilient learner identities.
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Success with a Profoundly Inexperienced Reader 327
differentiating literacy
instruction for adolescents
Zaline Roy-Campbell
Kelly Chandler-Olcott
330
Differentiating Literacy Instruction for Adolescents 331
• For different sections of the same class (e.g., building in more time
for partner talk prior to whole-class discussion in Period 2, which
includes a higher percentage of English language learners [ELLs],
than in Period 9).
• For groups of learners with similar needs (e.g., preteaching key
vocabulary to several struggling readers before viewing a documen-
tary while the rest of the class completes the previous task).
• For individual learners (e.g., offering a student with fine-motor dif-
ficulties access to a computer for word processing).
In our view, differentiating literacy instruction does not simply mean using
a variety of teaching strategies over time, just for variety’s sake. Our concep-
tion, like Nunley’s (2006), is standards driven: We believe that differentiated
literacy instruction should offer “a variety of instructional strategies for the
same specific objective” (p. 11), enabling all students to meet that objective.
Tomlinson (1999) has articulated a framework for differentiation that
encompasses four areas of modification: content (what students learn), pro-
cess (how they learn), product (how learning will be demonstrated), and
assessment (how learning will be evaluated). In addition, she argues that
teachers should differentiate to address students’ (1) readiness, (2) inter-
ests, and (3) learning styles. As she points out, differentiated instruction
requires both careful planning and a clear sense of learning goals: “We
have to know where we want to end up before we start out and plan to get
there” (p. 12). One way of viewing differentiation is to consider a group of
332 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
students headed to the same event. The athletically inclined may choose to
run; others may ride a bicycle. Those with access to a car may drive; others
may ride the bus. Some may walk. Those who are mobility impaired may
need assistance from others. They should all reach that same destination,
although clearly not at the same time or via the same means.
To extend the journey metaphor further, the CCSS can be seen as the des-
tination. The teacher’s challenge is to help all students become college and
career ready by the end of high school. Currently adopted by 45 states and
the District of Columbia, the CCSS are divided into four strands—reading,
writing, listening and speaking, and language skills—each of which outlines
a cumulative learning progression, K–12. Although the purpose of these
standards and the process used to devise them are open to critique (Calkins,
Lehrenworth, & Lehman, 2012), they do provide a national framework
for developing school literacy skills. In past years, when each state had its
own standards, some students completed school (or worse, dropped out)
with less developed literacies than others, with often-predictable inequi-
ties linked to social class, race, language, and ability. What we like most
is that the CCSS enjoin teachers to have high expectations for all students
and to assume that they can all reach the same destination. The document
states that while it is “beyond the scope of the Standards to define the full
range of supports appropriate for English language learners and for stu-
dents with special needs,” nonetheless “all students must have the oppor-
tunity to learn and meet the same high standards if they are to access the
knowledge and skills necessary in their post–high school lives” (National
Governors Association Center for Best Practices & Council of Chief State
School Officers, 2010, p. 6).
Differentiating Literacy Instruction for Adolescents 333
Multiple Intelligences
One means of differentiating classroom instruction is to identify students’
strengths and the ways they learn best, then to provide instructional activi-
ties that incorporate them. While some students can more readily access
knowledge from reading or listening, others need visuals or hands-on
experiences. The theory of multiple intelligences (Gardner, 1999) couples
perceptual learning styles—visual, auditory, and kinesthetic—with various
ways that students process information. It synthesizes contributions from
brain research and studies of literacy acquisition (Sousa, 2001). It supplants
the idea of a unitary, measurable intelligence with the proposition of nine
complementary spheres in which students can manifest intelligence: verbal–
linguistic, bodily–kinesthetic, visual–spatial, musical, logical–mathemati-
cal, intrapersonal, interpersonal, naturalistic, and existential (Gardner,
334 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
4 Writing •• The teacher models writing claims with the last third
evidence-based of the King text.
claims •• In pairs, students write additional claims, while the
teacher circulates to provide assistance.
•• Pairs share their claims and receive feedback.
•• Students write an additional claim independently
about either the Wiesel or King text or both.
similar topics. She resolves to show one of these in between students’ first
and second readings of the short text, both to remind students that Wie-
sel’s activism is grounded in personal experience and to provide a powerful
model for all students of English proficiency achieved by someone who is
not a native English speaker.
Also in keeping with UDL’s emphasis on multiple representations and
media, Ms. Taylor plans to employ technology to assist some students. The
state exemplar provides graphic organizers to help students make and sup-
port their claims, with instructions suggesting that the curriculum devel-
opers expected students to fill in responses by hand. Ms. Taylor knows
that some students, particularly those with laborious handwriting or more
limited English, may spend too much time recording answers and too little
thinking about the content of their claims. For this reason, she recreates
several organizers in digital form, loading them on laptop computers she
reserves for several classes. After she assigns the computers to several stu-
dents whom she thinks will benefit from them the most, she invites others
to sign up to use them on a rotating basis, a practice to which students are
accustomed. For three students, one identified with learning disabilities in
reading and written expression and two with insufficient English profi-
ciency, she creates a simplified version of the organizing claims graphic
organizer that requires fewer pieces of evidence and offers more room for
students to develop and explain their selections.
Ms. Taylor also resolves to offer her students some choice around how
they represent their learning related to evidence-based claims. The state
exemplar recommends that students write a claim related to one or both of
the King and Obama texts. Ms. Taylor wants everyone to practice making
an evidence-based claim but not necessarily in an essay format. Influenced
by both MI theory and UDL, she decides to offer three choices: (1) the essay
as the exemplar presents it, (2) a podcast, and (3) an oral presentation sup-
ported by Prezi. In each case, students will use the same graphic organizers
to represent their claims and evidence, but some will produce extended
written text while others will use more oral and visual language.
whose experiences and reading levels vary widely and that frustration with
texts that are too difficult or inaccessible can lead students to give up on
reading altogether. She is aware that frameworks like SIOP call for teachers
to tap into and build students’ background knowledge, while some CCSS
advocates de-emphasize the practice (Gewertz, 2012).
Given these debates, Ms. Taylor adopts a middle position. She decides
to invite students to complete their first reading of the Wiesel text inde-
pendently because it is short and will allow many students to draw on
knowledge from their global studies class. She is confident she can convince
them to persevere with the first reading and then provide some support
with background knowledge if needed before the second read. She is less
sanguine about students successfully navigating a cold reading of the King
text so she decides to share images about the Civil Rights movement as well
as engage students in a discussion of what they know about King and the
period to help students link what they already know to new knowledge they
will gain from reading.
success in the class. She expects the task to be a challenge for most stu-
dents, even the handful of students who read above grade level according
to the district assessment, so it seems like a good time to go with groupings
that maximize heterogeneity. She is mindful of the SIOP protocol’s cau-
tion against isolating ELLs in the classroom community by grouping them
repeatedly with one another, and this seems like a good time to mix them
with native speakers of English, as well as to mix students with disabilities
with those who lack such labels.
Later, during Part 4, when students are asked to write evidence-based
claims with a longer and more difficult text (the King speech), she intends to
create more homogeneous pairings, using data from student work and her
prior observations to indicate who is struggling to make claims and who
is grasping the concept quickly. As she circulates the room during the pair
work, such groupings will allow her to provide extra challenge for those
who are ready, by encouraging them to write a more sophisticated claim
that includes counterclaims. Similarly, she can offer additional support to
pairs who continue to struggle with this task, either by re-explaining the
task in new ways or by offering them the simpler graphic organizer she has
loaded onto the laptops. At this point in the instructional sequence, she
seeks to avoid a pairing where one partner’s skill might obscure another’s
need for additional instruction.
understanding on the fly for students who don’t volunteer much informa-
tion orally in class.
Ms. Taylor isn’t so lucky around schedule matching with Ms. Cheever,
the special educator, but Ms. Cheever e-mails ideas about making the
instructions for the three choices in the culminating assessment more
explicit, to ensure that all students understand what to do. She also sug-
gests modeling the claim-making process explicitly with a teacher think-
aloud, an approach particularly useful for inexperienced or struggling writ-
ers (Gallagher, 2006). Ms. Taylor makes those changes to her plans and
materials.
Midway through the unit, Ms. Taylor texts Ms. Cheever to ask for
advice about how to support Jason, a student diagnosed with ADHD who
is struggling to stay on task during whole-class discussions and, to a lesser
degree, while working with a partner. Ms. Cheever reminds Ms. Taylor
that it is helpful for Jason and other kinesthetic learners to move as part
of instruction, something that the state exemplar, which relies on discus-
sion, reading, and writing (all associated with MI theory’s linguistic intel-
ligence), doesn’t address. Ms. Cheever recommends the use of a fidget kit, a
collection of sensory items to help calm and focus Jason. Ms. Cheever also
advises Ms. Taylor to incorporate physical movement such as getting up
and moving chairs into the transitions between whole-class, partner, and
individual work outlined in the exemplar, to break up literacy activities
that learners would typically pursue while seated.
Conclusion
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cHaPter 19
William G. Brozo
In this chapter:
348
Assessment for Literacy Growth and Content Learning 349
learning for students and self-knowledge for students that will allow them
to become more reflective, active, and purposeful readers and learners.
By the time students reach secondary school, they are fully aware of
the importance of tests and their results. They know that completing a
course, entering a specific academic program, graduating from second-
ary school, and gaining admission to college and university are all largely
dependent on how they perform on tests. It is important for teachers to
realize, however, that these summative assessments of students are a repre-
sentation of the teaching that preceded them. That is, test scores tend to get
better when teachers have an ongoing and developmental assessment focus,
which guides them in the here and now of their daily teaching (Brozo &
Afflerbach, 2011).
Effective teachers meet students at their current levels of ability and
then scaffold attention and learning so students can move to the next
levels of achievement. Working in these zones of proximal development
(Vygotsky, 1978), secondary teachers can build on adolescents’ competen-
cies by presenting them with challenges that foster reading and learning
growth. Critical to presenting students with appropriate reading and learn-
ing challenges is detailed and “fresh” assessment information that helps
teachers direct the instructional focus. William (2000) asserts that “If
schools used assessment during teaching, to find out what students have
learned, and what they need to do next, on a daily basis” (p. 106), student
achievement would rise.
Teachers of science, mathematics, history, languages, and other subjects
of instruction in secondary schools must have a good deal of knowledge of
their individual student readers in order to customize learning experiences
for them. When contextually valid and ongoing assessment information is
available, secondary teachers are in the best position to provide their ado-
lescent students with responsive instruction that leads to successful reading
experiences with a textbook chapter, a newspaper or magazine article, a
graphic novel, or any other print or electronic text source (Afflerbach, 2004).
and processes are shared by all who employ the approach. These include
some form of universal screening or testing all students for possible learning
concerns; progress monitoring, the goal of which is to document growth;
and tiered interventions for whole groups, small groups, and individuals.
The degree to which assessments for universal screening and progress
monitoring are contextually sensitive and responsive to students’ authen-
tic literacy and learning processes will determine whether interventions
in this approach are effective (Brozo, 2011). For example, 1-minute timed
readings to gauge oral reading fluency is often used for progress moni-
toring, because, according to its advocates (cf., Shinn, 2007), it can serve
as a proxy for overall reading ability, including comprehension. Yet this
approach has been challenged on the grounds that it is not a viable way to
assess adolescents’ reading progress, given the complexities of texts and
learning expectations at the secondary level (Brozo, 2011). Furthermore,
when assessment approaches are reduced to standardized testing for uni-
versal screening and measures of the most basic elements of reading, such
as speed or oral reading, teachers may gain little more information than
what they already know or can be used to make an informed guess about
struggling secondary students.
At the same time, reconciling school reading and assessments with
real-life reading and uses can be challenging for any youth and lead to
problems with academic texts and tasks. Adolescents who struggle with
school-related reading tasks may participate extensively in out-of-school
literate activities for personally meaningful, identity-affirming, and socially
functional purposes (Alvermann & Wilson, 2007). They might read the
sports page of the newspaper to find out more about a favorite player,
find rap lyrics on a website as a guide for writing their own, or text with
friends to plan a movie for the evening. Youths’ competence with these real-
life literacy practices may not be valued in or connected to academic set-
tings, resulting in frustration, disengagement, and depressed performance
(Dredger, Woods, Beach, & Sagstetter, 2010; O’Brien, 2006).
In the next section, the literacy assessments described and exempli-
fied demonstrate authentic and viable practices in secondary classrooms.
Because these assessment practices reveal rich and directly useable infor-
mation about students’ literacy competencies, they can inform responsive
instruction for all students, especially diverse learners.
Scenario 1
Marcus is a history teacher in a secondary school. His school principal
decided that all students should be tested at the beginning of the school
year, so teachers would know how well they read. For the first week of
school, students were required to complete a standardized reading test.
Instructional
Student’s Name Strengths Needs Strategies
1.
2.
Student:
Assessment Tool:
Unanswered Questions:
Now read Scenario 2 just as carefully. After reading it, fill out the
Assessment Reflection Sheet (Figure 19.2) for Maria’s student, Christina.
Compare and contrast your responses to the first and second scenarios. (If
you are reading this chapter as part of a course or with colleagues as part
of professional development, discuss the cases and your responses.) Also,
compare your responses to the Assessment Reflection Sheet for Christina
in Figure 19.4.
Vocabulary Comprehension
Student (total correct/total possible) (total correct/total possible)
Scenario 2
Maria is an eighth-grade science teacher. After attending a profes-
sional development workshop on content area assessment procedures,
she became interested in discovering more about her students’ ability
to comprehend textbook information. She realized she needed alterna-
tive assessments to the tests at the end of the chapters in her science
book. Maria was relying more and more on these tests for grading
purposes and less on other assessments of her students as readers and
learners. Moreover, she was not using the chapter test results to adjust
the way she taught the textbook content.
The professional developer emphasized the need to tie content
material to the processes for learning it effectively. The profes-
sional developer made suggestions for ways teachers could teach
and assess at the same time. Maria decided to use this information
to develop her own assessment tool using the class textbook. For
an upcoming unit on geology, she designed an assessment that was
consisting of several short sections with a few questions in each sec-
tion. The textbook assessment with sample questions can be found
in Figure 19.5.
Name:
Unit: Geology
consider how a high school English teacher struggles to make the literary
device of allusion clear to his literature students. Allusions are difficult
for even the most “with-it” students to appreciate, because they are often
indirect or brief references in a literary work to a person, character, place,
or thing in history or another work of literature. If readers don’t know the
events and characters to which an author alludes, then the allusion loses
its impact.
To help sensitize his students to this literary device and thereby appre-
ciate its significance, the teacher gives the class its initial exposure to allu-
sion through a YouTube video clip of Shrek 2, a popular animated film for
youth. The 3-minute clip includes several visual allusions to other films
and film characters, both real and animated, with which the students are
already familiar. As the clip plays, the teacher asks students to note any
images that reference other movies or movie characters, and then holds a
discussion afterward. This visual approach, using media from his students’
everyday lives, proves quite successful, as they are able to identify several
allusions in the video.
Next, the teacher guides his students through a class blog he has estab-
lished. He indicates where they are to make entries and respond to their
classmates. In his homework assignment he asks students to find examples
of allusion in their own media—books, films, games, music—and post each
example on the blog with an explanation of the allusion. Each student is
required to post two examples on the blog and write two entries in response
to their classmates.
The English teacher uses these entries as assessment data to determine
the extent to which his students understand the concept of allusion and
whether additional instruction around the concept is warranted for the
class, small groups, or individuals. The teacher meets with students, goes
over a scoring rubric like the one in Figure 19.10, and provides needed clar-
ifications and additional practice. The approach produces many interesting
362 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
5 Points (A). The example of the allusion is unique and shows depth. Description is
thoughtful and accurate and connects directly to the allusion.
4 Points (A). The example reveals an understanding of allusion. Description is
accurate.
3 Points (B). Selection of the allusion is acceptable but doesn’t stand out. Some
connection to the allusion in the description.
2 Points (C). Selection of the allusion shows general understanding but description
lacks direct connection to the allusion. Will need additional guided practice.
1 Point (D). A weak example of an allusion with limited and inaccurate description.
Will need additional instruction and guided practice.
0 Points (F). No allusion example provided.
and accurate allusions from most students in his class, like the two exam-
ples below.
Student 1
“My allusion is from the anime Lucky Star (which no one has prob-
ably heard of, but is the only one I can think of at the moment). In
one of the episodes, the main character, Konata, cosplays (dresses up)
as a character from another anime, Haruhi from The Melancholy of
Haruhi Suzumiya, at a cosplay café. The function of this allusion, in
a way, is self-promotion because the writers of Lucky Star also wrote
The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya.”
Student 2
“In a Jimmy Neutron—Boy Genius episode, Jimmy goes to find out
why the Bermuda Triangle has so many problems. On his way into the
ocean to search for an underwater entrance, we see a small pineapple.
As all Nickelodeon viewers know, SpongeBob Squarepants lives in that
pineapple. This was the producers’ allusion to SpongeBob and their
way of saying ‘Hi’ to the cast of SpongeBob.”
From here, the English teacher transitions his class from exploring
their media for allusions to searching out and uncovering allusions in tra-
ditional print texts, such as poems and plays in the class literature anthol-
ogy. In using this assignment and its assessment, the teacher is able to take
advantage of his adolescent students’ competencies with literacies and
interests outside of school to achieve his goal of motivating them to read
and respond on a more thoughtful level to required texts in his classroom.
Assessment for Literacy Growth and Content Learning 363
References
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Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psycho-
logical processes (M. Cole, V. John-Steiner, S. Scribner, & E. Souberman
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assessments. The Critical Quarterly, 42, 105–127.
cHaPter 20
“I have just witnessed too many examples of schools waiting for the
communities of practice to develop organically only to fi nd that it
takes a lot of behind-the-scenes work to really make it happen and
seem organic. It is like gardening—you can grow organic vegetables
and fruits, but it takes a lot of work to create the right compost and
know how to use to amend the soil, a lot of knowledge from the gar-
dener to know how to pair plants for maximum benefit and what birds
and insects are necessary so you do not have to use pesticides, and
365
366 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
what climate, water, and light conditions create the best yield. If you
do not know how to attend to all these issues, you can get lucky with
one crop, but it will not be sustained without the requisite knowledge
and attention.”
Jose: No, it seems like they are having hard time summarizing in my
class.
K risty: I am not trying to make anyone feel funny, I am trying to fig-
ure out what we all have in common to find a common strategy.
Jose: Information text-wise—pulling out information from informa-
tional text. The more advanced students pull out information
from [a text about] an immigrant from Romania writing about
immigrating to the U.S. They have trouble pulling our informa-
tion that is more about inference. More straightforward OK, but
getting deeper into it is harder.
Betty: I can go over some strategies with them. So . . .
K risty: Sounds like the kids get it in some classrooms and not in oth-
ers. So in the next couple of weeks, let’s teach central theme and
details and then share what you did and how the students did.
Bring in the best, average and worst.
Administrators:
Planting and Tending the Garden
“We develop professional behaviors through collaboration
with our peers and guided reflection.”
Administrators, like the one quoted above, are the constant gardeners
of communities of practice in schools. At ASU Prep, the leadership team
included the building- and district-level curriculum and administrative
370 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
In the quote above, one teacher leader sees her role as a peer coach as
being derived from professional interactions. Recent literature supports
peer coaching as an effective strategy for meeting teachers’ growing pro-
fessional development needs (Jewett & MacPhee, 2012; Vogt & Shearer,
2011). The CCSS (NGA & CCSSO, 2010) and Cambridge demand a high
level of academic literacy across all grade levels and content areas. A col-
laborative peer-coaching model affords teachers opportunities to learn
from one another as knowledgeable equals in order to help students achieve
higher standards and meet benchmarks. According to Marchese (2012) col-
laborative peer coaching helps foster an “authentic community of learners”
who “engage in ongoing dialogue” and “support one another’s professional
growth” (p. 47). At ASU Prep, embedding peer coaching into communities
of practice seemed like a natural pairing. Tending these communities often
involved the consistent interaction of teacher leaders.
Teacher leaders at ASU Prep, sometimes referred to as mentor teach-
ers, department heads, lead teachers, literacy coaches, and peer coaches
coordinate and moderate the regularly scheduled cluster meetings, observe
in classrooms, conduct formal and informal evaluations, and confer with
individual teachers. They provide professional development in a variety of
formats, adjusting to meet the needs of the teachers and students. At times,
they meet in formal, structured settings like the clusters we described earlier.
At other times, they meet with teachers informally and in less structured
environments. They provide tailored professional development, sometimes
Coaching and Growing Literacy Communities 373
“Hi, Thanks for a chat in the hall! I just remembered that there was
something else I wanted to run by you. For the second quarter, I want
to do some sort of project based learning with my ninth-grade English
class that involved poetry/literature/art from around the world, tech-
nology, and public speaking. Do you have any good books for project
based learning or any other ideas?”
The teacher leader, in response to this e-mail, provided feedback and sug-
gested resources that could be used to develop her project.
As teachers and teacher leaders participated in these sorts of informal,
collaborative interactions during the school day, they discussed student
progress, shared observations about the teaching strategies that they had
been using in the classroom, and compared notes about their successes and
failures. They also devised new ways of working and coached one another
as they came upon problems that required creative solutions. They drew on
resources available to them through their peers.
At ASU Prep, teacher leaders, along with administrators, conducted
formal and informal evaluations of teachers. Viewed as more than simply
instruments used to administer performance payouts or to make personnel
decisions, teacher evaluations were considered opportunities for reflection
and colearning. Teacher evaluations, including the postobservation meet-
ings, were often the topic of the leadership meetings. These conversations
prepared and supported teacher leaders in this aspect of the circular pro-
cess described above. Postobservation meetings were typically set up after
the formal evaluation observations, although some were held after infor-
mal classroom walkthroughs. One teacher, for instance, made a point of
grabbing some coffee from a teacher leader’s room after a walkthrough
observation to share with a teacher leader. While drinking their coffee,
the teacher asked for feedback on the observations and discussed with the
teacher leader the decisions he had made during instruction.
Meetings after formal evaluations typically followed a predictable
pattern. Beginning with a period of reflection, teacher leaders asked
Coaching and Growing Literacy Communities 375
teachers to comment on the parts of the lesson they thought were success-
ful and parts of the lesson they would have changed. Next, the teacher
leaders shared observational data and evaluation scores with the teachers.
The teacher leaders identified areas of strength and weaknesses as deter-
mined by the evaluation protocol and rubric. This portion of the meet-
ings generally led to conversations about teaching strategies, resources
for improving instruction, and ideas about how lessons might be taught
in the future. Teachers generally valued this time to talk about their prac-
tice. As one teacher wrote in a follow-up e-mail to the teacher leader who
had evaluated her, “I wanted to tell you how much I valued our conversa-
tion yesterday morning. I feel so lucky to work at a school where I can
have fellow teachers observe my practice. Our meaningful conversation
gives me concrete ways to improve and helps me to feel confident in my
strengths.”
Meetings such as this one helped grow communities of practice and
the collaborative culture at ASU Prep. This result was particularly evident
during one postobservation conference. A teacher in the middle school
used a postevaluation meeting as a time to talk about ways to improve
students’ questions and engagement in discussions about texts. Stating
that the students in her class were becoming less motivated as the school
year progressed, the teacher asked for help to put some fire back into
classroom discussions. The teacher leader was able to help the teacher
reflect on her own practice. She guided the teacher to make a connection
between the help she requested and what had been observed during the
evaluation observation. Using the observation as the foci, they reflected
together about how engaged the students were when they had an oppor-
tunity to respond directly to each other and co-created an activity that
they both thought would motivate students to participate in discussions
about text.
Evaluations, in addition to providing opportunities for peer coaching
and collaboration within communities of practice, are useful in determin-
ing foci for future conversations in cluster meetings. They are a part of the
circular design process mentioned in the section above. Teacher leaders and
administrators evaluated teachers at the school, observational data were
discussed in leadership meetings, and administrators and teacher leaders
used the data to design and facilitate cluster meetings. Recognizing the
importance of this process, one of the teacher leaders said, “I sort of see
myself as a liaison between the administration and . . . the whole high
school.”
The mentor teachers in each of these settings acted as facilitators,
determining the structure of meetings and creating environments in which
teachers could work together to reach common goals. They participated in
communities of practice in a variety of ways, coaching teachers and helping
teachers to coach one another. Whether in formal or informal meetings,
376 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
What We’ve Learned from the Teacher Tips for Teacher Leaders
Leaders
•• By creating a positive, comfortable, •• Develop a sense of collegiality and
and collegial environment in formal collaboration among teachers.
meetings, teacher leaders help teachers •• Help teachers to feel comfortable and
to become productive peer coaches safe in sharing what they know and
during scheduled meetings and in what they want to know.
informal interactions.
•• Make time for the teachers with whom
•• One-legged meetings, short and you work. Remember that people
informal interactions among teachers participate in communities of practice
and teacher leaders, are just as and engage in peer coaching in many
important as formal meetings. different ways.
•• Effective teacher leaders are supportive •• As you consider the needs of teachers
rather than exclusively directive. They and students, look for resources within
help teachers to solve problems, make your team and work with teachers to
adjustments to instruction, and find the find creative solutions for problems.
resources.
•• When conducting observations and
•• Formal and informal evaluations can postobservation evaluations, be
lead to conversations about teaching respectful and state your observations
strategies, collaborations with teachers, based on the approved evaluation
and opportunities for peer coaching. protocol or rubric.
FIGURE 20.2. Lessons learned from and tips for teacher leaders.
Coaching and Growing Literacy Communities 377
Darlene: Hi, how’s it going today? I see you’re working on your liter-
ary analysis paper. Let’s begin by reading it out loud to see what
we want to focus on. Would you like me to read it or would you
like to read it?
A nna: You can read it.
Darlene: (Reads the paper out loud) OK, so what do you think the
strengths of your paper are?
A nna: I think I have topic sentences and I have my context . . . and I’ve
said Cinderella is obedient.
Darlene: When we read it I noticed that not all of your paragraphs
included quotes. How do you think you might be able to include
some quotes in your paragraphs?
A nna: I think I could . . . oh, OK, I think I know . . . (Begins to make
margin notes on her own paper.) When the narrator says that “the
poor girl suffered it all patiently . . . ” I could use that.
Darlene: Good. OK. Let’s look at the next part. (Reads out loud.)
378 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
The session continued along similar lines, with the Darlene and Anna
working through the writing process engaged in conversation and reflec-
tion. Through prompting, questioning, and guidance, Darlene helped Anna
to analyze, edit, and revise her own writing. If Darlene had needed guid-
ance as a coach or had been unsure as to what kinds of questions could
best help Anna, Darlene may have consulted the other peer-writing tutors
who were in the room with her at the time or she may have asked Lettice
Pelotte (the third author of this chapter), who acts as the facilitating teacher
during peer tutoring sessions. Most of the time, however, Darlene expertly
handled the situation on her own, as did the other trained peer-writing
tutors. In an interview Darlene discussed her process when engaged in a
peer-coaching session:
“First, when I ask them a question I try restating the question. And
then I try having them read over their work to me and see if they catch
their error. So, first I have them try to catch it, then I ask the question
and I’ll rephrase it. I know what I’m doing is working by just the way
they look me in the eye. The way they just start fixing things on their
paper. I know when they’re struggling or they don’t understand what
I’m trying to say. I know that if I were to get somebody that doesn’t
really understand, then I will go to another peer writer and say, ‘Hey,
you know, I’m having some trouble.’ ”
“I feel like we all take leadership in the group. And we all just enter
ideas. I don’t think that there’s a single person that’s the leader. We all
contribute to the understanding of how to be a peer writer.”
380 ADDRESSING PROGRAM AND POLICY ISSUES
What We’ve Learned from Tips for Peer Coaches and Their Teachers
the Peer-Writing Coaches
•• Adolescents can benefit from the •• Make time for training to build tutoring
collaborative learning structure of strategies and confidence in the peer
communities of practice. coaches and find time for ongoing
•• Peer coaching helps develop the training to address ongoing needs.
skills and metacognitive processes of •• Help develop a sense of shared purpose
both the coach and the recipient of among the peer coaches and the
coaching. students they work with. This sense of
•• Collaborative peer coaching helps community will help drive the project
adolescents develop not only their forward.
literacy skills, but also their leadership •• Remind coaches that they are not
skills. expected to know everything. Make sure
they know they can rely on the other
coaches and teachers for support.
FIGURE 20.3. Lessons learned from and tips for peer coaches and their teachers.
Conclusion
Darlene’s statement that she feels like a member of a learning family reflects
our deepest belief that real learning and knowing happens when people
come together for a common goal and engage in intrinsically meaning-
ful activities that result in the betterment of the group as a whole. Socio-
cultural learning theory asserts that learning takes places within social
interactions (Vygotsky, 1978). Communities of practice provide a space for
learning to take place socially—whether it is among peers or among peers
and mentors.
Collaborative peer coaching in communities of practice is not an acci-
dental happening, but a way of life at ASU Prep. Intentionally cultivated
through administrative leadership, tended to by teachers and their leaders,
and harvested by our students, communities of practice are continually
growing, expanding, and changing in order to meet the needs of our school.
3. Peer coaching can be beneficial for students and teachers. Imagine you were
a teacher leader to an experienced teacher on your staff. How would you
facilitate and build a peer coaching collaboration?
4. You agree that peer-writing coaches would assist your students in becoming
better writers. You have tried peer editing before, and it was a total flop.
After reading about the success of the peer-writing coaching community of
practice you would like to try it again. Develop a plan including goals and
outcomes.
References
383
384 Index
Assignments, late or incomplete, 311, 318, Challenge in Six C’s approach, 55, 56t
319 Challenging texts, 207–229
credit for completion of, 317, 321, 345 charts and tables in, 213t, 215t, 218–219,
Attention, in writing process, 155–156 225
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, 344 close reading of, 210, 216, 219–220,
Attitude and motivation, 38 222–228
Attributions and motivation, 47, 49, 50, 51 complexity and deliberate practice of,
Audience of writing, 157, 161, 163–164 99–117
on mathematics, 202–203, 203f comprehension of, 211–228
Automaticity, 109–110, 111, 258 in differentiated literacy instruction,
Autonomy, 53 341–342
A Word A Day (AWAD) approach, 127–129, discussion questions and activities related
129f to, 228–229
for EAL students, 25–26
B engagement in, 112, 208–209, 220
Background knowledge on history, 208, 210–222, 239
in challenging reading, 221–222 knowledge and skills necessary for,
and comprehension of text, 90, 138–139, 211–219, 223–224
142f motivation in, 52, 208–209, 219–222
of EAL students, 30 opportunities for success in, 252
in multiple text strategies, 176 outside of school, 209, 219
in qualitative measure of text complexity, progression of difficulty in, 110–112, 115
142f–143f purpose of reading, 208, 216–217,
in sheltered instructional observation 222–223
protocol, 336, 342 questioning for understanding of, 225–226
and word learning, 125, 125f, 134
for struggling readers, 88–92
Bang (Flake), 7, 9
summarizing and synthesizing in,
Beals, M. P., 293, 295, 298
227–228
Beasts of No Nation (Iweala), 12
visual images used with, 216, 224, 226,
Bell Work, 131
227
Beowulf, 253
vocabulary in, 211, 221
Bias, 271f, 276f
in history text, 171, 179, 181, 182, 182t, Charts and tables in challenging texts, 213t,
235, 236, 237 215t, 218–219, 225
Bilingualism, 21. See also English as Chemistry class, profoundly inexperienced
additional language reader in, 308–323
Biology instruction, 57t A Child Called It (Pelzer), 7, 10
Blogs, 46, 53, 122, 158, 171, 361 Choice
Bodily–kinesthetic intelligence, 333, 334 autonomy in, 53
The Body (Kureishi), 7, 9 in challenging reading, 110, 113, 208–209
Borderland discourse, 66, 68, 69, 70 and engagement, 48f, 49f
Brown, W., chemistry class of, 308–323 in English/language arts classrooms,
Brown v. Board of Education, 235, 305t 251–252, 255
Bryan, H., 295f, 297, 305t and motivation, 41, 46, 52–53, 209,
Buehler, J., 251 251–252
Building Adolescent Literacy in Today’s in multimodality, 302
English Classroom (Bomer), 160 in Six C’s approach, 55, 56t
for struggling and resistant readers,
C 120–121
Call of the Wild (London), 12 in word learning, 127
The Canterbury Tales, 253 of writing topic, 155–156
Career readiness. See College and career Citizenship in Discourse study, 75t, 76
readiness Clarity of language in qualitative evaluation
The Catcher in the Rye (Salinger), 261, 303t of text, 104, 105t, 106t, 142f
CCSS. See Common Core State Standards Classroom environment, 4
The Century for Young People (Jennings, content-area conversations in, 27–29
Brewster & Armstrong), 304t disruptive talk in, 93
Index 385
G H
Gandhi (Demi), 304t Hamlet (Shakespeare), 250, 255–256
Gaybonics dictionary, 68–69 Handbook of Motivation at School (Wentzel
Gender differences in connection with text, and Wigfield), 37
9 Hawthorne, N., 7, 260
Geographic knowledge necessary for Henry, O., 87
challenging texts, 214 Hispanics, 22, 63t, 350
Geology instruction, content-area reading History, reading and writing on, 232–246
inventory in, 356, 358f CCSS on, 233–234
GIST (generating interaction between challenging texts in, 208, 210–222, 239
schemata and text) strategy, 260 charts and tables in, 213t, 215t, 218–219,
Gladwell, M., 115 225
Glogster program, 132–133 on chronology and causes of events,
Goal setting 235–237, 245
and motivation, 40, 47, 50, 51, 52 close reading in, 177–178
of struggling readers, 86–87 coherence of text in, 235, 243
Good readers comprehension in, 150
deliberate practice of, 109–110 constructing meaning in, 57t
talent of, 114–115 content-area reading inventory on, 352,
Google, 171 354
Gore, A., 7, 11 context of text in, 179–180, 182t,
Gould, S. J., 139 214–216, 234, 237, 240, 242–243
Grade level reading corroboration of text in, 179–180, 234,
CCSS on, 82, 102, 103f 240, 243
complexity of text in, 102, 103f, 140 critical reading in, 182t, 273
motivation in, 40, 49 discussion questions and activities related
and reading identity, 84 to, 246
struggling with, 81 for EAL students, 29–33
Gradual release of responsibility in strategy empathy in, 239
instruction, 262, 263, 278–280 frameworks in, 235, 243
Graffiti, 159 graphic organizers for, 243, 244f, 245, 246f
Grammatical patterns in mathematics, in Hamlet study, 255–256
193 knowledge and skills necessary for,
The Grapes of Wrath (Steinbeck), 103, 211–219
104–105, 106, 106t, 113 motivation and interest in, 219–222, 241
Graphic organizers in multimodal approach, 243–244, 294
in differentiated literacy instruction, 341, multiple texts in, 170, 172, 173–175,
345 177–182, 183, 233, 234, 240, 241–242
for English as additional language perspectives and bias in, 171, 179–181,
students, 32 182, 235–237, 240
in English/language arts classrooms, problem framing in, 210, 223
261 procedural facilitators in, 182, 182t
in history instruction, 241, 243, 244f, purpose of, 216–217, 233
245, 246f questioning strategy in, 181–182, 182t,
for struggling readers, 275 223
in vocabulary instruction, 131 sentences in, 238
Greek word roots, 130, 132 sources of information in, 171, 179–180,
Group study 182t, 234–235, 237, 240, 242
of difficult text, 91–92 by struggling readers, 232, 273
EAL students in, 32–33 summarizing and synthesizing in,
struggling readers in, 91–92, 124 227–228
text-based discussions in, 143–145 textbooks in, 232, 237, 238, 240, 242,
of vocabulary, 124 243, 244, 273
Guided practice for struggling readers, vocabulary in, 211, 238, 239, 244–245
54 website resources on, 240–241
Guthrie, J. T., 39, 40, 41, 250, 251, 252, Home environment, and Primary Discourse,
253 64–67
390 Index
M Motivation, 36–58
Maathai, W., 340 in challenging reading, 52, 208–209,
Maniac McGee (Spinelli), 56t 219–222
Mastery orientation, 38, 51 choice affecting, 41, 46, 52–53, 209,
Mathematical register, 192 251–252
Mathematics instruction, 191–205 collaboration affecting, 252–253
audience in, 202–203, 203f complexity of text affecting, 111, 112
CCSS on, 191–192 definition of, 37–38
communicative competencies of students developmental trajectory of, 41
in, 23 discussion questions and activities related
content-area conversations in, 27–28 to, 55–58
content-area reading inventory in, 353 in English/language arts classrooms,
discussion questions and activities related 250–253
to, 205 extrinsic, 40, 250, 269
for EAL students, 23, 27–28 in history reading, 219–222, 241
embedded strategy instruction in, 274 importance of, 38–39
feedback in, 198, 200f, 200–202, 201f in instructional frameworks, 40–45
and knowledge necessary for challenging intrinsic, 39, 40, 47, 250
texts, 211–212 key questions on, 41, 42t–44t, 46–47,
language of mathematics in, 192–205 50–54
modeling in, 196 misconceptions about, 36–37
multiple texts in, 171, 185 of normally achieving readers, 45–47
PEMDAS acronym in, 27–28 in Reading Apprenticeship, 317
prior knowledge in, 194–196, 203, 204 relevancy of learning affecting, 147, 251,
scaffolding in, 196–197, 198–199 270, 272
textbooks in, 185, 273 and Six C’s approach, 55, 56t–58t
vocabulary in, 192–193, 274 of struggling readers, 39, 42t–44t, 47–54,
McCourt, F., 7 81, 94, 269, 270–273
Meaning, levels of, in qualitative evaluation successful experiences affecting, 252
of texts, 104, 105t, 106t, 141f Multilingualism, 21. See also English as
Media Literacy Education Core Principles, additional language
and Discourse study, 71–73, 72t–73t, Multimodality, 291–306, 350
75t, 75–77 in assessment, 359–362
Metacognition and CCSS, 292, 293, 295, 299, 301,
in apprenticeship for profoundly 302
inexperienced reader, 311, 313, 314, and conceptual understanding, 296–
316–317 297
in comprehension strategies, 147, 260, connections in, 300–302, 303t
263, 274 design in, 297, 298–300
in Discourse instruction, 67, 69, 70, 76 in differentiated literacy instruction, 335,
in Six C’s approach, 56t, 57t 338, 340–341
in word learning, 124 discussion questions and activities related
MetaMetrics, 102, 107 to, 306
Mini-lessons diverse perspectives in, 297
on challenging text, 224 in English/language arts classroom, 256,
on mathematics, 201 293–295
for struggling readers, 275 in history instruction, 243–244, 294
writing in, 163, 166 popular culture materials in, 301–302
Modeling, 106 in prereading activities, 272
of comprehension strategies, 147–148, self-selected text in, 302
151, 262, 263 for struggling readers, 53
of mathematics language, 196 in vocabulary instruction, 132–134
in strategy instruction, 262, 263 Multiple intelligences, and differentiated
of summarizing and synthesizing, 227– literacy instruction, 330, 333–334, 340,
228 341, 342, 344
of word learning, 124, 125 Multiple representations in universal design
Morphemes, 130–131 for learning, 335, 338, 341
392 Index