Publication | Closed Access
Layering Intermediate and Disciplinary Literacy Work: Lessons Learned From a Secondary Social Studies Teacher Team
37
Citations
38
References
2016
Year
Abstract Secondary TeachersDisciplinary Literacy WorkEducationLiteracy DevelopmentTeacher EducationChild LiteracySocial StudiesReading ComprehensionAdolescent LiteracyPrimary EducationTeacher DevelopmentLiteracy PracticeDisciplinary Literacy SkillsAdolescent Literacy ProcessesLiteracy LearningDisciplinary Literacy ProjectCurriculum & InstructionEarly Childhood LiteracyLiteracySpecial EducationCritical LiteracyProfessional DevelopmentTeacher PreparationSocial Science EducationContent Area LiteracyLiteracy TeachingEducation Policy
Abstract Secondary teachers nationwide are encouraged by the Common Core State Standards and recent research to enact disciplinary literacy instruction. However, little is known about how teachers make sense of teaching disciplinary literacy skills to adolescents. To what extent might adolescents still need the kinds of foundational support provided by what Shanahan and Shanahan called intermediate strategy instruction, or instruction in general reading comprehension strategies? In this article, the authors describe findings from a disciplinary literacy project in which a group of high school social studies teachers (and the authors) discovered that a complex layering of intermediate and disciplinary literacy work was required to meet students’ needs. Implications for teams of teachers wishing to explore this tension and keep their focus on helping students access and communicate content material are shared.
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