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Journal ArticleDOI

Questioning the Text: Advancing Literary Reading in the Second Language Through Web-Based Strategy Training

Per Urlaub
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
- Vol. 46, Iss: 3, pp 508-521
TLDR
In this article, the authors report on the implementation of a Web-based, strategy-oriented approach to literary reading in a second-year university language program and present data from a question-naire study that assessed learners' percep- tions of this teaching approach.
Abstract
This study assessed language learners' perceptions of an instructional approach to literary reading in the second language. The approach under investigation is based on a Web tutorial that teaches questioning strategies. Seventy?eight German students enrolled at a state university in the United States participated in the study. Questionnaire data suggest that most of the learners perceived the approach positively in regard to its impact in facilitating the development of literary reading competencies in the second language. Students with positive perceptions about the Web tutorial were more likely to report a positive affective response to the literary texts and a higher motivation to continue the study of German beyond the university's foreign language requirement.Key words: literature instruction, reading strategies, second language reading, Web-based instructionIntroductionCommunicative language classrooms of the 1980s and 1990s tended to emphasize interpersonal spoken exchanges rather than interpretive or presentational modes of communication. Since that time, educational objectives that address critical interpretive reading have gained an increasingly central role in major curricular guidelines, including the Framework for 21st Century Skills (Bellanca & Brandt, 2010), the Common Core State Standards (Kendall, 2011), the Standards for Foreign Language Learning in the 21st Century (National Standards, 1996), and the MLA Report (MLA, 2007). As the emphasis on interpretive reading has increased, a greater focus on literature has reemerged as a significant component in foreign language curricula. However, despite a broad consensus regarding the importance of critical reading in language instruction at all levels, few concrete approaches guide instructors in helping students to develop literary reading competencies. This article reports on the implementation of a Web? based, strategy?oriented approach to literary reading in a second?year university language program and presents data from a question- naire study that assessed learners' percep- tions of this teaching approach.Literature ReviewLiterary Reading and the Second Language LearnerPrior to the 1990s, the authentic texts that were included in commercially published teaching materials were accompanied by either extensive glosses or vocabulary lists, both of which encouraged word?for?word translation rather than reading for meaning (Swaffar, Arens, & Byrnes, 1991). This implies that many practitioners at that time found it either impossible, or unneces- sary, to have language learners at the beginning and intermediate levels read authentic texts without significant support from the native language. Critical reading skills, if present in the first language, were largely assumed to transfer into the target language only after the learner had passed a particular linguistic threshold (Clarke, 1980; Cummins, 1985). When this transfer failed, literature instructors blamed insuffi- cient linguistic preparedness in lower?level language courses for their students' inability to read and understand literary texts in upper?level courses. This flawed under- standing partly contributed to the two?tiered curriculum in North American university language programs during most of the second half of the 20th century-a curricu- lum that consisted of two years of basic language training focusing primarily on oral skills and often fulfilling the institution's language requirement, followed by two years of courses focusing on literature and culture for majors, minors, or students with deeper intrinsic motivation.Partially in response to an increasingly dramatic enrollment crisis in university foreign language departments, this curricu- lar structure was increasingly questioned during the second half of the 1990s. As a result, a number of language departments began to reform their undergraduate pro- grams, resulting in new curricula that integrated the study of language, literature, and culture at all levels of instruction (Bernhardt & Berman, 1999; Byrnes & Kord, 2002; Kern, 2000; MLA, 2007; Swaffar & Arens, 2005). …

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Moving toward Multiliteracies in Foreign Language Teaching: Past and Present Perspectives … and Beyond.

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Exploring EFL literature approaches in Dutch secondary education

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Reciprocal Teaching of Comprehension-Fostering and Comprehension-Monitoring Activities

TL;DR: In this article, two instructional studies directed at the comprehension-fostering and comprehension-monitoring activities of seventh grade poor comprehenders are reported, and the training method was that of reciprocal teaching, where the tutor and students took turns leading a dialogue centered on pertinent features of the text.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teaching Students to Generate Questions: A Review of the Intervention Studies

TL;DR: A review of intervention studies in which students have been taught to generate questions as a means of improving their comprehension can be found in this paper, where the cognitive strategy of generating questions about the material they had read resulted in gains in comprehension, as measured by tests given at the end of the intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differences in the metacognitive awareness of reading strategies among native and non-native readers

TL;DR: Results of the study revealed that both US and ESL students display awareness of almost all of the strategies included in the survey, and both ESL and US high-reading-ability students show comparable degrees of higher reported usage for cognitive and metacognitive reading strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Language proficiency and reading ability in first- and second-language learners

TL;DR: This paper investigated the development of and interrelations between the language proficiencies and reading abilities of children learning to read in either a first language or a second language and found that the minority children were faster decoders than the Dutch low SES children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interpreting Relationships between L1 and L2 Reading: Consolidating the Linguistic Threshold and the Linguistic Interdependence Hypotheses

TL;DR: The authors tente de determiner si la lecture en L2 est une question de linguistics (seuil linguistique) or a question de lecture (interdependance linguistics).
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