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Journal ArticleDOI

Teaching Disciplinary Literacy to Adolescents: Rethinking Content- Area Literacy

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TLDR
In this article, the authors present data collected during the first two years of a study on disciplinary literacy that reveal how content experts and secondary content teachers read disciplinary texts, make use of comprehension strategies, and subsequently teach those strategies to adolescent readers.
Abstract
In this article, Timothy and Cynthia Shanahan argue that “disciplinary literacy” — advanced literacy instruction embedded within content-area classes such as math, science, and social studies — should be a focus of middle and secondary school settings. Moving beyond the oft-cited “every teacher a teacher of reading” philosophy that has historically frustrated secondary content-area teachers, the Shanahans present data collected during the first two years of a study on disciplinary literacy that reveal how content experts and secondary content teachers read disciplinary texts, make use of comprehension strategies, and subsequently teach those strategies to adolescent readers. Preliminary findings suggest that experts from math, chemistry, and history read their respective texts quite differently; consequently, both the content-area experts and secondary teachers in this study recommend different comprehension strategies for work with adolescents. This study not only has implications for which comprehension strategies might best fit particular disciplinary reading tasks, but also suggests how students may be best prepared for the reading, writing, and thinking required by advanced disciplinary coursework. Reading is commonly viewed as a basic set of skills, widely adaptable and applicable to all kinds of texts and reading situations. Accordingly, in the 1990s, most states took on the challenge of improving young children’s reading skills, assuming that once the basics of literacy were accomplished, students would be well equipped for literacy-related tasks later in life (Blair, 1999). The idea that basic reading skills automatically evolve into more advanced reading skills, and that these basic skills are highly generalizable and adaptable, is partially correct: The basic perceptual and decoding skills that are connected with early

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Journal ArticleDOI

Foregrounding the Disciplines in Secondary Literacy Teaching and Learning: A Call for Change

TL;DR: In this article, the author argues that knowledge and skill in the subject matter of the disciplines is essential to young people becoming active participants in a democratic society and argues for building disciplinary literacy instructional programs, rather than merely encouraging subject matter teachers to employ literacy teaching practices and strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Words as Tools: Learning Academic Vocabulary as Language Acquisition

TL;DR: The authors discuss the role of academic vocabulary within academic language, examine recent research on instruction in academic vocabulary, considering both general academic words and discipline-specific words, and offer their perspective on the current state of this research and recommendations on how to continue inquiry and to improve practice in this area.
Journal ArticleDOI

What Is Disciplinary Literacy and Why Does It Matter

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare disciplinary literacy with the more widely emphasized approach known as content area literacy and provide an analysis of the growing research base underlying the disciplinary literacy construct and their implications for school programs and instruction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teaching Scientific Practices: Meeting the Challenge of Change

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the underlying model that the new Framework presents of science better represents contemporary understanding of nature of science as a social and cultural practice, and that adopting a framework of practices will enable better communication of meaning amongst professional science educators.
Journal ArticleDOI

Special Education Teacher Quality and Preparation: Exposing Foundations, Constructing a New Model:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace changes in conceptions of special education teacher quality and preparation in response to developments in special education research, policy, and practice, and argue that preservice preparation is inadequate for this purpose and that preparation for special education teaching should build upon an existing knowledge base and demonstrated competence in classr...
References
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Journal Article

Teacher Quality and Student Achievement: A Review of State Policy Evidence

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the ways in which teacher qualifications and other school inputs are related to student achievement across states using data from a 50-state survey of policies, state case study analyses, the 1993-94 Schools and Staffing Surveys (SASS), and the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), and found that measures of teacher preparation and certification are by far the strongest correlates of student achievement in reading and mathematics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Literacy and health outcomes

TL;DR: Low literacy is associated with several adverse health outcomes and future research, using more rigorous methods, will better define these relationships and guide developers of new interventions.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a model of reading for dyslexia and dysarthric children, focusing on the work of the eyes and eye-movement control during reading.
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TL;DR: This article explored the evolution of scientific discourse in the English-speaking world, and the apprenticeship of students into the discourse in secondary schools, focusing on the use of language and literacy issues in scientific research.
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