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Reading Matters

Teaching Matters

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26

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Reading Matters | Volume 16 • Winter 2016 |

scira.org CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO TABLE OF CONTENTS

PRINCIPLE 3: Develop ways to learn about the role of literacy

in disciplinary subjects.

It is not feasible for literacy teacher

educators to take courses to learn about the concepts and

practices of all the content area subjects that they will encounter

in their teaching. However, it is important that they have some

familiarity with the various disciplines and the role that literacy

plays in each discipline (Johnson et al., 2011). One of the ways

that they can do this is by learning from their students. As

literacy teacher educators, we oftentimes feel that we are the

sole dispensers of information while our students are always the

recipients of what we deliver. However, that does not always have

to be the case. Oftentimes these preservice and inservice students

come to us with several credit hours of discipline-specific courses

that they have taken, and they are well-versed in the principles of

their subject area. They know how to read and process the text

in their disciplines, and they know the kinds of information that

P-12 students need to think about and learn to be considered

proficient in their disciplines (Hynd-Shanahan, 2013). And so,

either through a formal class assignment, or a question posed

for general class discussion, we could ask them to respond to the

following:

Based on your knowledge of and experience with your

specific discipline, help me to understand what reading and writing

looks like in your content area. That is, if I walked into your classroom

and observed students’ using reading and writing to acquire

knowledge, what should I expect to see?

Asking this question each

semester will help literacy teacher educators to develop a strong

understanding of what it means to use literacy in each discipline.

PRINCIPLE 4: Help students to see how literacy strategies can

be authentically adapted to their individual disciplines.

Gillis

(2014) believes that “strategies adapted (rather than adopted)

to fit the content (discipline specific strategies) are more

effective than general literacy strategies” (p.616). The literacy

teacher educator must think about ways that strategies can be

adapted

to fit learner needs. The literacy teacher educator can

also encourage students to think about how they can adapt

specific strategies to meet their individual needs. Maybe a

weekly activity could be called,

How Can I Adapt This Strategy?

With this activity, students would get an opportunity to analyze

strategies that are presented to determine how it would need to

be modified to work for a specific topic within their discipline.

Shanahan and Shanahan (2008) conducted a study on

disciplinary literacy to discover “how content area experts and

secondary content teachers read disciplinary tests, make use

of comprehension strategies, and subsequently teach those

strategies to adolescent readers” (p. 40). In this study they

found that content-area experts and secondary teachers were

somewhat reluctant to teach some of the generic strategies

suggested by the researchers, saying that the strategies did not

promote the disciplinary literacy skills needed for their specific

discipline. For example, one chemistry teacher was reluctant

to use a particular reading strategy on summarization until he

suggested a modification of the strategy. With the modification,

“the strategy was not just about understanding text; it was also

about understanding the essence of chemistry” (p.54). The

strategy was

adapted

to make it subject matter specific. Also,

the history content-area experts and secondary history teachers

liked several of the strategies recommended by the literacy

researchers; however, suggestions were made for improvement

to more closely mirror a historian’s way of thinking. As a result

of their two year study, Shanahan and Shanahan (2008) found

that “the disciplinary teams advocated strategies that mirrored

the kinds of thinking and analytic practices common to their

discipline” (p. 56). However, they also contended that:

instead of trying to convince disciplinary teachers of

the value of general reading strategies…we set out

to see if we could formulate new strategies or jury-

rig existing ones so that they would more directly and

explicitly address the specific and highly specialized

disciplinary reading demands of chemistry, history, and

mathematics. (p.57)

This reflects the idea presented in principle four. As literacy

teacher educators, we must not simply present a plethora

of general reading strategies to our students in the various

disciplines; instead we must understand the nuances of the various

disciplines represented in our classes and teach our students

to

adapt

those general strategies, not simply

adopt

them.

PRINCIPLE 5: Examine the linguistic challenges of academic

texts that may make them demanding to read for adolescents.

As children move from elementary school to middle school to

high school, the reading of academic texts becomes increasingly

more complex. The language typically used in elementary texts

is closer to the language used in everyday conversation and the

topics typically focus on areas of interest to elementary-aged

children. On the other hand, adolescents are faced with language

demands in their academic texts that are more “advanced, abstract,

and complex…the language used to construct and challenge

this specialized knowledge thus becomes more technical, dense,

abstract, and hierarchically structured” (Fang, 2012, p.35). Not only

is the language more complex, but it also varies from discipline

to discipline; academic texts in history are distinctly different

from those in science or mathematics or music, making the

comprehension of academic texts challenging for many readers.

This linguistic variation across the disciplines does

not just occur at the word level; it also takes place at

the level of grammar…Recognizing disciplinary ways

of using language is important because one cannot

fully comprehend the text of a specific discipline …

without having a sense of how the discipline organizes

knowledge through language. (Fang, 2012, p.36)

As literacy teacher educators we must prepare our

students to recognize and examine these linguistic variations

in the various disciplines. This requires literacy teacher

educators to understand both the quantitative measures and

qualitative measures of text complexity (McArthur, 2012).

This presents a problem for literacy teacher educators. As

mentioned earlier, just as it is not feasible for literacy teacher

educators to take courses to learn about the concepts and practices

of all the content area subjects that they will encounter in their