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Eric Calvert

Building Reading Proficiency at the Secondary Level: A Guide to Resources: Building Rea... - 0 views

  • Motivation to Read Reading proficiency requires the reader to independently begin and persist in reading tasks, actions that hinge on motivation (Snow, Burns, & Griffin, 1998). As students move through the grades, especially at the middle school level, their motivation to choose to read tends to decline (Donahue et al., 1999; Guthrie & Wigfield, 2000). Feelings of competence and self-determination engendered by a reading task likely affects the reader's intrinsic motivation for it (Deci & Ryan, 1985). In a study of four struggling middle school readers, Kos (1991) found that despite expressing strong desires to read successfully, these students had negative views of reading in school settings, which they associated with feelings of failure. By the secondary grades, they readily recognized the simplified text that has been written for their remediation and associated such materials with failure and social stigma. Authentic texts (such as newspapers and trade books) and choice in selecting reading materials are especially important for fostering reading persistence in struggling secondary readers (Cope, 1993; Worthy, 1996). Instructional scaffolding for choosing authentic materials has also improved reading interest and skill among these students (Ammann & Mittelsteadt, 1987; Collins, 1996; Ryan & Brewer, 1990).
  • Affect Intrinsically motivated readers persist in reading because of affective engagement, the pleasure or satisfaction that is gained from their value or interest in the task (Baumann & Duffy, 1997). In avoiding reading, the struggling reader has little opportunity for potentially motivating connections of emotions, feelings, and sentiments of transacting with text. Even secondary students who are competent readers may avoid reading unless it is required when they fail to see it as useful or interesting to them (O'Brien et al., 1997).
  • The teacher who is aware of literacy contexts outside the classroom can connect those contexts to reading tasks and the selection of materials. In structuring reading tasks and selecting materials, teachers should allow student choice, while providing support in making those choices.
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  • Building linguistic knowledge. To build linguistic knowledge, struggling readers need more than opportunities for incidental learning. A meta-analysis by Stahl and Fairbanks (1986) shows traditional instruction in word definitions has little effect. Word study and explicit instruction that includes orthography, morphology, and spelling can strengthen the effects of vocabulary learning (Templeton & Morris, 2000).
  • Transaction with Text Proficient readers engage in dialog with text (Alexander, 1997; Henk, Stahl, & Melnick, 1993; Molinelli, 1995). In Rosenblatt's (1978) theory of reader response, the interchange of ideas between the reader and the text, or the speaker and the listener, is called transaction.
Eric Calvert

Reading Motivation: 10 Elements for Success - 0 views

  • How often a child reads is explained by 3 factors: sufficient resources, early success and motivation. Two indicators of young children’s reading motivation are competency beliefs (beliefs about own abilities) and goal orientation (whether and why a child wants to be a good reader). Reading skills and motivation correlate with and influence one another over time. Motivation to read declines as students enter middle school. A 2004 study of 5 popular remedial programs indicated that the impact of motivation on struggling readers seemed to be largely ignored by the program developers.
  • n a 2001 review of research, Guthrie* identified 10 instructional elements that form the foundation for engagement and motivation in reading:
  • Real-world instruction Autonomy supportCollaborative learningPraise and rewardsInteresting texts
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