"This is a story about four brothers named Everybody,
Somebody, Anybody and Nobody. There was an important job to be done and
Everybody was sure Somebody would do it. Anybody could have done it but Nobody
did it. Somebody got angry with that because it was Everybody’s job. Everybody
thought Anybody could do it but Nobody realized that Everybody wouldn’t do it.
It ended up that Everybody blamed Somebody when Nobody did what Anybody could
have done."
-Unknown Author
At
this point in my teaching career I have a somewhat unique view on secondary
school literacy. Currently I am teaching 7th and 8th grade Language
Arts/Reading AND 7th and 8th grade Science. That's correct, I am a middle
school Language Arts teacher AND a content area teacher. I have seen both sides of the challenge
discussed on Vanderbilt University's The IRIS Center Website (The IRIS Center,
2012). The main challenge is that
content area teachers do not think it is their job (or do not know properly
how) to teach literacy skills in their given subject area AND Language Arts
teachers are overwhelmed enough by the amount of content and skills they have to teach
already in their own class to be bothered teaching content area literacy. So the challenge is: whose job is it anyway?
As a middle school Language Arts
teacher I can see that side of the challenge.
I am expected to teach reading comprehension skills, writing, grammar,
literature etc. in five 45 minute periods per week. I have trouble fitting all that in, never
mind worrying about my students' literacy skills in their content area
classes. On the flip side, I teach
Science. I believe I have a great
advantage over my content area colleagues, because of my literacy education
background. I can understand why someone
whose specialty is Science education, would not be concerned with, or more likely would not be aware of, what they could do to help their students reading
comprehension in Science. As teachers it
makes sense that if you specialize in a content area, it has become
easy for you to read text in your area and comprehend it easily. This can create a professional blind-spot for
teachers. Sometimes we cannot see where
our students are struggling, because for us it has become second
nature. This is why content area teachers need more training in literacy education.
nature. This is why content area teachers need more training in literacy education.
So, let's get back to our question,
whose job is it to teach content area literacy?
The answer is ALL TEACHERS. As
the IRIS website states:
"Many content-area teachers believe that reading instruction is not their responsibility. They did not receive the relevant training and generally feel it is someone else’s role to teach reading skills. Although reading specialists and special educators might in fact provide instruction for students who struggle with basic reading skills such as decoding words and reading fluently, it is nevertheless important for content-area teachers to integrate literacy instruction into their classes" (The IRIS Center,2012).
All teachers need to work together to build student literacy
across the board. Content area teachers need to take responsibility with
Language Arts Teachers, Reading Specialists, and Special Educators. Integrating content literacy into their
instruction will help not only students' literacy but their content knowledge
as well.
Unfortunately, a lot of content
area teachers have not been given the proper training to help build their
students content literacy skills. The
IRIS website gives some excellent resources for content area teachers to help
their students build their literacy skills.
One strategy in particular that I learned from the IRIS website is
teaching vocabulary using the Frayer Model .
This is a great strategy to teach vocabulary that should be fairly easy
for a teacher to implement into their instruction. It is a much better strategy than just having
students copy and memorize definitions from a glossary (which, doesn't really
work according to research).
Content area teachers and Language
Arts teachers need to all work together to build student literacy. In their research on improving student
literacy across content areas from elementary school through secondary school
McDonald, Thornley, Staley, and Moore found that the most important thing for
students is consistency: "This process has made clear that routine is a
critical element of the approach and that this must extend across lessons,
texts, tasks, and content areas if we are to be successful in raising
achievement" (McDonald, Thornley, Staley, & Moore 2009). Teachers need to really work together to find
strategies work that work for them and their students, and make literacy skills
a consistent and routine focus across the board.
References
The IRIS Center.
(2012). Secondary Reading Instruction: Teaching Vocabulary and Comprehension in
the Content Areas. Retrieved from
http://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/module/sec-rdng/
McDonald, T.,
Thornley, C., Staley, R., & Moore, D. W. (2009). The San Diego Striving Readers' Project: Building Academic
Success for Adolescent Readers.Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy,
52(8), 720-722.