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Reading Matters

Teaching Matters

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44

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Reading Matters | Volume 16 • Winter 2016 |

scira.org CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO TABLE OF CONTENTS

Abstract — Teachers and university researchers in one high school

contextualized learning experiences for struggling readers, making

room in the classroom for disengaged students’ voices, their literacies

and their curiosity. Questioning about what would happen if literacy

learning was structured around not standardized test preparation,

but instead one “disinterested” student’s interests, the authors took

a first step in making their classroom a successful learning space for

all students. The growing numbers of students who struggle with

test-driven literacy instruction suggest that we “rethink” our work as

teachers in some fundamental ways. As we consider the impact our

teaching will have on students’ futures and on our own outcomes

as a people, finding ways of connecting academic experiences with

relevant “outside of school” literacies becomes of great importance.

Meeting Joshua

Joshua (all names are pseudonyms) was a high school senior

who, after three tries, had yet to pass the state-mandated reading

test and now faced the possibility that he would not graduate

high school. He was enrolled in a project that I was involved in

at the university where I served as an administrator and reading

professor. The project, “Reading Buddies,” paired low-performing

high school students with at-risk elementary children. We

were visiting the elementary school where these high school

students would read picture storybooks to non-reading first

graders. In the breezeway of the school sat a magnificent

dugout canoe that stretched nearly fifteen feet. The high school

boys were admiring the canoe when one of them turned to

me and asked, “How did they make these things anyway?”

“I’m not sure,” I answered. “I guess they cut

down a tree and chiseled out the inside.”

Joshua rolled his eyes. “No, they didn’t,” he said quietly.

“Canoes like this one are hundreds of years old. The Indians

used canoes for thousands of years and made them before

they had the tools to chop down trees or chisel anything.”

The boys snickered. “So,” taunted one.

“How did they make them, Joshua?”

“With fire.”

Joshua proceeded to tell us, in vivid detail, how native

Americans would locate the right tree, near the waterway, fell

it by burning, and then use fire to hollow it and flatten the

bottom, and primitive tools, like oyster shells, to smooth the

wood, mud to seal it and bear grease, perhaps, for periodic

seasoning. It would take six or seven men days or even weeks to

make one canoe. He also explained to us that some high school

students in Florida discovered more than a hundred canoes

near Newnan’s Lake and some of those canoes, representing

the world’s largest such archeological find, are on exhibit in the

Florida Museum of Natural History at the University of Florida.

I listened, amazed. This was a boy who, on paper, was

a failing at-risk student. Yet, he possessed knowledge

of this subject that would rival that of a university

professor. He used a technical vocabulary to explain the

canoe-making process, which he understood well.

“How do you know all of this?” I asked him, incredulous.

“I’ve done a lot of research in this area- native

American culture. If you want, I could send you

some web links so you can read up on it.”

His low test scores and failing grades aside, Joshua exhibited

significant literacy skills that fell clearly under the radar of

traditional school assessments, particularly those high-stakes

assessments by which students and schools are judged. As

Apple (2005) points out, the focus in contemporary U.S. schools

on high stakes standardized tests reduces the fullness of life

so that “only that which is measurable is important” (p. 11).

It is no wonder then that it is harder for some students to

connect to thin curriculum and the concomitant skill and drill

teaching (or drill and kill, as students often call it) it engenders.

Perhaps it is our struggling learners, for whom contextualized

learning experiences would offer a richer and fuller learning

experience, who are most disadvantaged by this reality.

Contextualized learning is nothing new. In fact, it dates

back to John Dewey who, at the turn of the 20th century,

advocated a curriculum and a teaching methodology tied to

the child’s experiences and interests. One of our problems in

schools is that what we want students to learn is detached from

real-world referents. Because learning is decontextualized, it

often holds little meaning, especially for struggling students.

Despite his reading test scores, Joshua loved to read about

things that were interesting to him. Over the six months that

I worked with Joshua’s teacher, I observed Joshua reading

Sharon Draper’s

The Battle of Jericho

, as well as Elie Weisel’s

Night

. He was an everyday newspaper reader, mostly sports.

But, he also became interested in several articles about an

engine failure incident on a Qantas Airbus 380, a double-decker

plane that, amongst other innovations, touted a luxurious

interior. Beneath his quiet exterior was a boy who had plainly

From Canoes to Titanic: Contextualizing Reading

Instruction for Struggling Readers

Patricia Wachholz, Armstrong State University

Julie Warner, Georgia Southern University