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Literacy Engagement, Classroom Talk, and College and Career Preparedness

Literacy Engagement, Classroom Talk, and College and Career Preparedness. Gay Ivey University of Wisconsin, Madison. The state of school engagement. S teady decline over the school years, with particular road bumps during transitions to middle and high school (Dotterer et al. 2009).

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Literacy Engagement, Classroom Talk, and College and Career Preparedness

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  1. Literacy Engagement, Classroom Talk, and College and Career Preparedness Gay Ivey University of Wisconsin, Madison

  2. The state of school engagement • Steady declineover the school years, with particular road bumps during transitions to middle and high school (Dotterer et al. 2009). • Strongest decline among racial minorities, boys, and low socioeconomic groups (Wigfield, Eccles, Schiefele, Roeser, & Davis- Kean, 2006).

  3. The state of reading engagement: • Reading engagement is identified as a tool for improving reading achievement • Disengagement in reading is a persistent problem nationally • U.S. ranks 38th out of 40 nations in terms of reading interest and engagement (PIRLS) • Current reform efforts focus on cognitive skill and strategy instruction and increasing text complexity to boost achievement (CCSS)

  4. Linked to school engagement: • Academic achievement • Cognitive strategy use • Attendance • Graduation • Academic resilience • Expanded social regulation • Social competence • Protective factors against problematic social behaviors (drug and alcohol abuse; risky sexual behaviors)

  5. Some ways people think about reading and engagement • Engagement begets more reading which begets greater fluency which begets greater comprehension (e.g. Hank et al., 2010) • Engagement is created through a combination of interest, self-efficacy, and cognitive strategy use (Guthrie et al., 1996) • Engagement is about the individual experience • Engagement is a tool for improving reading achievement (Guthrie & Wigfield, 2000)

  6. Another way to think about reading and engagement • Reading is a dialogic, relational activity (Langer, 1995; Lysaker, 2011; Rosenblatt, 1938/1983) • Reading is a tool for constructing self and sense of others • Engagement is social • Engagement is related to the development of the whole person

  7. A shift to engaging books • Daily self-selected, self-paced reading • No strings attached (e.g., projects, reports, response journals) • Beginning-of-the-year BOOKFEST • Rotating collections • Edgy young adult literature (difficult topics, moral uncertainties)

  8. Consequences Shifts/Expansion of: • Identity • Agency/autonomy • Social imagination • Self-regulation • Expanded knowledge • Engagement • Happiness • Intellectual stance • Moral stance • Response • Talk about books • Relationship • Community • Test scores

  9. A cascade of effects (Ivey & Johnston, 2012):

  10. Engagement and the things we worry about…. • Academic language/vocabulary (e.g., limitation, benefit, process) • Reading “dense” texts • Writing • Research

  11. The status quo is limiting • Individual achievement • Cognitive achievement

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