"I Just Like Being Good at It": The Importance of Competence in the Literate Lives of Young Men

This study explores the importance of competence in boys' literate lives. Participants were 49 middle and high school boys from very different backgrounds, ethnicities, social classes, and levels of academic achievement. They came from an elite, private all boys' school; a large suburban h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of adolescent & adult literacy 2004-03, Vol.47 (6), p.454-461
Hauptverfasser: Smith, Michael, Wilhelm, Jeffrey D.
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Wilhelm, Jeffrey D.
description This study explores the importance of competence in boys' literate lives. Participants were 49 middle and high school boys from very different backgrounds, ethnicities, social classes, and levels of academic achievement. They came from an elite, private all boys' school; a large suburban high school; a large urban school; and a small rural school. The schools were located in three states along the eastern seaboard of the United States. This study draws on three kinds of interview data collected: an interview on the boys' favorite activities; an interview on their responses to short profiles emphasizing different ways of embracing or rejecting various kinds of literacy; and an interview every four to six weeks about literacy logs in which the boys recorded all of the reading, writing, listening, and viewing they did in and out of school over a three-month period. In general, the participants embraced activities in which they were competent or through which they felt they could demonstrate improvement toward competence. They rejected activities in which they believed they would be or appear to be incompetent. The data not only establish the importance of competence, but also indicates that the activities favored by the boys tended to be ones in which they could receive clear and immediate feedback on their competence. Recognizing the critical importance of competence in the literate lives of the participants challenges the authors as teachers and teacher educators. Their data have caused them to consider their instruction in a new way.
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They rejected activities in which they believed they would be or appear to be incompetent. The data not only establish the importance of competence, but also indicates that the activities favored by the boys tended to be ones in which they could receive clear and immediate feedback on their competence. Recognizing the critical importance of competence in the literate lives of the participants challenges the authors as teachers and teacher educators. Their data have caused them to consider their instruction in a new way.</abstract><cop>Hoboken</cop><pub>International Reading Association</pub><tpages>8</tpages></addata></record>
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Academic Achievement
Banduras
Boys
Career Choice
Competence
Discourse Analysis
Education
Educational Research
Educational Resources
Educational Strategies
Educational Testing
Feedback (Response)
High Schools
Individual Activities
Instructional Improvement
Interviews
Literacy
Males
Masculinity
Men
Middle Schools
Reading
Reading Achievement
Rural Schools
School activities
Self Efficacy
Seminary
Sports
Student activities
Student Attitudes
Student Journals
Student Motivation
Teachers
Teaching Methods
United States
Urban Schools
title "I Just Like Being Good at It": The Importance of Competence in the Literate Lives of Young Men
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