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Reading Matters

Commentary

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Reading Matters | Volume 16 • Winter 2016

scira.org

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77

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Transforming pedagogy to support

adolescent literacy

Our hope is that this commentary can offer practical advice

for helping teachers and schools of education use the Read to

Succeed Act to envision and enact responsive disciplinary literacy

teaching. Literacy scholars have started teaching disciplinary

literacies to PSTs who identify with a particular discipline (Park,

2013; Wilder, 2014). Park noted “even if the pre-service teachers

resisted the idea of teaching disciplinary literacy, they accepted

that adolescents, on any given day, are being asked to navigate a

range of disciplinary discourses, knowledge, and even identities”

(p. 381). Those identities, discourses and knowledge extend

throughout and beyond the schooling experiences of students,

and expanded notions of adolescent literacy link literacy practices

with power and the critical literacy movement (Freire, 1986;

Shor, 1992). Coburn et al. remind us “when the policy promotes

instructional approaches that are ambitious or unfamiliar, teachers

are more likely to implement them in superficial ways rather than

making fundamental changes in their instructional approach”

(2011, p.573). Therefore, in order to facilitate this learning for

PSTs (and therefore disciplinary literacies for adolescents), we

offer four recommendations for teacher preparation programs:

1. Provide PSTs with ample opportunities to experience and

deconstruct literacies within their teaching discipline.

Since many PSTs hold limited understanding of the ways

reading, writing, speaking and reasoning are used to construct

disciplinary knowledge, PSTs need ample opportunities to

experience disciplinary literacies and inquiry. Redesigning content

area literacy courses to include disciplinary-specific literacy inquiry

can deepen a PST’s disciplinary literacies and disciplinary literacies

pedagogy. Even when multiple disciplines are represented in

the same course, PSTs can be guided through a three phase

cycle of inquiry into disciplinary literacies. At Clemson, Margaret

and her fellow social studies education PSTs enrolled in Phillip’s

junior year disciplinary literacies course, participated in historical

inquiries, doing what they seldom experienced in high school or

undergraduate history courses—creating and defending historical

arguments. First, PSTs experience disciplinary literacy using

reading, writing, and discourse practices to construct arguments

about unsettled questions hotly debated by historians. For

example, social studies PSTs applied historical reading heuristics

(Wineburg, 1991) to their collaborative reading of “Condemning the

Errors of Martin Luther” by Pope Leo X, “The Ship of Fools” painting

by Jheronimus Bosch, “Against the Robbing and Murdeirng Hordes

of Peasants” by Martin Luther, and a PBS secondary source entitled

“The Reluctant Revolutionary” to debate whether Martin Luther’s

reforms lead to a religious revolution in Europe. Then, PSTs used

reflective writing prompts to deconstruct their use of historical

reading heuristics (sourcing, contextualixing, corroborating, and

close reading) while analyzing the complexity of texts, identifying

requisite background knowledge, and exposing the limits of

their own ability to read, reason, and construct arguments across

multiple texts like historians. Finally, in stage three, Phil guided

PSTS through a disciplinary-specific pedagogical framework to

envision additional scaffolding needs for adolescents and to

design a unit of study extending from the disciplinary inquiry. This

process scaffolded PST understanding of how to create historical

inquiry questions, build text sets, identify text complexities, and

use formative assessment to determine appropriate scaffolds for

students. PSTs expanded notions of literacy teaching by routinely

experiencing the literacies within their teaching discipline.

2. Literacy learning needs to occur within a professional

learning community in collaboration with practicing

teachers-- the preparation of PSTs cannot occur without

apprenticeship and engagement with current teachers.

But, what happens when Margaret encounters the norms of

literacy instructional practice by other social studies teachers

during her field placement and student teaching? How might

the literacy pedagogy of fellow teachers validate or contradict

disciplinary literacy teaching? And, in what ways could a re-

envisioning of the partnership between teacher education

programs and local schools built shared disciplinary literacy

teaching frameworks? In

Powerful Teacher Education

(2013)

,

Linda

Darling-Hammond catalogues seven preservice preparation

programs that are succeeding with innovative practices. One of

their common practices includes connecting strongly with the

classrooms in which student teachers are placed. It is not enough

to expand the academic grounding in literacy-- new teachers

need to be supported in placements that blur the boundaries

between the development of theoretical knowledge and

the application of that knowledge in classrooms. Clemson

University, where we work, currently integrates methodology

classes with lab settings; however, we need to be more targeted

in those placements, particularly if we are asking students to

both consider disciplinary literacy practices and to understand

literacy practices as complex, situated and fluid. The relationship

with mentor teachers is key in ensuring both that students are

working with a teacher who shares this ideology and who will

help them find spaces to explore literacy, both as practiced in a

classroom and in the actual lived experiences of student lives.

To this end, Clemson’s faculty-in-residence initiative places a

faculty member in a local school for a semester in order to facilitate

collaborative inquiry amongst teachers. As Phillip, acting as an

instructional coach, meets with social studies teachers to support

their disciplinary literacy instruction, Margaret’s placement at

the same school affords her an opportunity to both participate

in the design of responsive disciplinary literacy instruction and

build shared beliefs and practices. PSTs need to see practicing

teachers enact disciplinary literacy teaching practices, yet due to

the relative newness of disciplinary literacy teaching, practicing

teachers also need to develop first hand experience teaching for

disciplinary literacies. With Phillip guiding the group through the

same three stage process of experiencing disciplinary literacies,

deconstructing literacy practices, and designing additional

scaffolds for adolescent learners, all teachers-both preservice

and inservice—can be provided with the professional learning

spaces to inquire into the disciplinary literacy needs of students.

Therefore, schools of education must harness the potential power

of R2S and engender authentic school-university partnerships

where practitioners, PSTs, and literacy professors jointly share