Disciplinary Literacies and Learning to Read for Understanding: A Conceptual Framework for Disciplinary Literacy

This article presents a framework and methodology for designing learning goals targeted at what students need to know and be able to do in order to attain high levels of literacy and achievement in three disciplinary areas-literature, science, and history. For each discipline, a team of researchers,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Educational psychologist 2016-04, Vol.51 (2), p.219-246
Hauptverfasser: Goldman, Susan R., Britt, M. Anne, Brown, Willard, Cribb, Gayle, George, MariAnne, Greenleaf, Cynthia, Lee, Carol D., Shanahan, Cynthia, Project READI
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container_end_page 246
container_issue 2
container_start_page 219
container_title Educational psychologist
container_volume 51
creator Goldman, Susan R.
Britt, M. Anne
Brown, Willard
Cribb, Gayle
George, MariAnne
Greenleaf, Cynthia
Lee, Carol D.
Shanahan, Cynthia
Project READI
description This article presents a framework and methodology for designing learning goals targeted at what students need to know and be able to do in order to attain high levels of literacy and achievement in three disciplinary areas-literature, science, and history. For each discipline, a team of researchers, teachers, and specialists in that discipline engaged in conceptual meta-analysis of theory and research on the reading, reasoning, and inquiry practices exhibited by disciplinary experts as contrasted with novices. Each team identified discipline-specific clusters of types of knowledge. Across teams, the clusters for each discipline were grouped into 5 higher order categories of core constructs: (a) epistemology; (b) inquiry practices/strategies of reasoning; (c) overarching concepts, themes, and frameworks; (d) forms of information representation/types of texts; and (e) discourse and language structures. The substance of the clusters gave rise to discipline-specific goals and tasks involved in reading across multiple texts, as well as reading, reasoning, and argumentation practices tailored to discipline-specific criteria for evidence-based knowledge claims. The framework of constructs and processes provides a valuable tool for researchers and classroom teachers' (re)conceptualizations of literacy and argumentation learning goals in their specific disciplines.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/00461520.2016.1168741
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source Education Source; Taylor & Francis Journals Complete
subjects Behavioral Objectives
Content Area Reading
Educational psychology
Epistemology
Fundamental Concepts
History
Inquiry
Language Usage
Learning
Literacy
Literature
Logical Thinking
Meta Analysis
Oral Language
Persuasive Discourse
Reading
Reading Instruction
Sciences
Systematic review
Written Language
title Disciplinary Literacies and Learning to Read for Understanding: A Conceptual Framework for Disciplinary Literacy
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