Thursday, August 5, 2010

Literacy Development is Key to Students' Attaining Essential Learning Outcomes

The results of international literacy testing agents such as the Organisation for Economic Cooperative Development’s (OECD’s) Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), inform policy at national levels concerning literacy instructional practices; the impact of this is felt around the globalised world which includes the regional, local political and educational milieus, as adolescents prepare to enter the worlds of work, further education and/or training.

This is reflected in the Essential Learning Outcomes outlined in the Trinidad and Tobago Ministry of Education curriculum guides: Aesthetic Expression, Citizenship, Communication, Personal Development, Problem Solving, and Technological Competence. The nature of these outcomes serve to underscore the idea that competence in reading (and writing) are integral components of the development of such competencies in a digital/informational global scenario requiring multiple literacies.

Digital Age Literacy

The challenge facing reading specialists and teacher of reading in general is the need to ensure that the professional's skill set is au courant with the demands and the requisite literacies of living in a digital age. Only then will he/she become truly equipped for the task.

"Based on two years of research, the enGauge 21st Century Skills represent the fresh, serious, new perspective required in light of recent historical events, globalization, and the idiosyncrasies of the Digital Age. The following skill clusters, when considered within the context of rigorous academic standards, are intended to provide the public, business and industry, and educators with a common understanding of – and language for discussing – what is needed by students, citizens, and workers in the Digital Age.


Digital-Age Literacy

Basic, scientific, economic, and technological literacies
Visual and information literacies
Multicultural literacy and global awareness

Inventive Thinking
Adaptability/managing complexity
Self-direction
Curiosity, creativity, and risk-taking
Higher-order thinking and sound reasoning

Effective Communication
Teaming, collaboration, and interpersonal skills
Personal, social, and civic responsibility
Interactive communication

High Productivity & Quality, State-of-the-Art Results
Ability to prioritize, plan, and manage for results
Effective use of real-world tools
The ability to create relevant, high-quality products"

www.metiri.com/21/21%20Century%20Skills%20Final.doc
2003 NCREL Metiri Group

The Dynamic Nature of Literacy Across the Curriculum

Some Thought-Provoking Nuggets:

“The dynamic nature of literacy encompasses more
than the ability to read and write…

Literacy has come to represent a synthesis of language,
thinking, and contextual practices through which
People make and communicate meaning…

The more society evolves, the more complex and
multi-dimensional the concept of literacy becomes.”

Vacca and Vacca, 2008)

Helping students to think and learn with all kinds of text is an important responsibility of the content area teacher.

Teachers need to help students “learn how to learn”.
Engage students in thinking processes by which they learn the content.

Research shows that students who actively engage in learning activites and respond to higher order thinking questions out-perform their peers.

It is important that the teacher organise instruction around students’ prior knowledge.

To become literate in a content area, students must understand how to use reading, writing, talking, and viewing to learn.

More time for literacy does not mean less time for learning other subject matter.

“Narrative is irremovably installed in the human psyche...[

Food for Thought on Teaching Reading to Struggling Learners:

Rosen (in MacLure) refers to the concept of narrative as the ‘irrepressible genre’; it is international, transhistorical , transcultural: it is simply there like life itself....There are widespread claims that the real significance of narrative is that it is a fundamental way in which the mind works... [which] suggests that narrative is at the heart of our mental and social processes.

“The inner speech we use is learned in social interaction. We use the experiences of such discourse to handle our experience narratively in our minds. It would be unusual to find people who would not admit to telling stories in their heads. We daydream and dream in narratives. No one seems to take much notice of this but narrative is the fundamental way in which the mind works, according to Bakhtin (1886)” (p.3).

Oral Language as a Base for Reading and Writing

According to Thorn (1974), oral language--must be the first consideration at all levels of the school program because in a language-centred classroom, students use talk purposefully to further their study objectives and meet set goals. In addition, she elucidates, oral proficiency is reflected in increased ability to write and read.

Thorn further stresses that an individual’s dependence on oral language as a base for writing and reading is apparent in the initial stages of learning when the beginning reader/writer first tests the sentence orally. Moreover, “oracy is important to the development of a congenial classroom situation” and allows students to use language to facilitate smooth group procedures (pp. 114-116).

"In his talk he creates a personal context; nobody else can do it for him because it has got to be in relation to his own experience. And he does that, above all, in his talk “ (p. 116).

Instructional Design for Today's Learner

Every pedagogue knows the importance of learner characteristics to instructional design. Daigre ( ) succinctly emphasizes this point when she states that “learner styles are key in developing effective instructional design materials….The instructional designer must be able to identify the target audience…[specific] to four categories of learner characteristics: cognitive, physiological, affective, and social.

This is particularly relevant for the teacher seeking to integrate technology into the reading instruction domain. As such, it is first necessary to take cognizance of the distinctive attributes of today’s twenty-first century learner—the Millennial Learner who has been profiled by Monaco and Martin as being a socially active team-oriented, optimistic, technologically-savvy type individual possessing the desire to participate in constructing his/her own knowledge.

With this in mind, it is interesting to note Howard Gardner’s lament that is that all too often, formal schooling often neglects the multiple ways of knowing

Literacy: A Global Concern

Reading literacy and by extension text comprehension--remains a priority aim of education systems worldwide. As such, text comprehension may be considered the fundamental principle of reading and learning.

The learner, cannot be considered to have truly read if that individual has not fully comprehended i.e. made sense of the text; the development of students’ comprehension skills, therefore, is of critical importance in today’s vast, dynamic technological and digital global environment.

Web 2.0 technologies such as blogs, wikis, and podcasts can facilitate effective instruction in text comprehension which is the bedrock of the reading act and appropriate skills and strategies that build comprehension must be taught explicitly to assist students in becoming effective, independent readers to fully comprehend a variety of texts—informational or literary.

This raises serious concerns about the nature of instructional strategies for developing students’ text comprehension skills in relation to students’ attainment of Essential Learning Outcomes.