intro ra slides

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Wested Introduction to Reading Apprenticeship

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1

Strengthening Post-SecondaryStudent Literacy

through Reading Apprenticeship®

http://www.WestEd.org/ReadingApprenticeship

2

WestEd’sStrategic Literacy Initiative (SLI)

• A professional development and research

organization focusing on improving

academic literacy in diverse populations of

adolescents and post-secondary students

using Reading Apprenticeship, a research-

based instructional framework.

3

Reading Apprenticeship

• A partnership of expertise between the

teacher and students, drawing on what

content area teachers know and do as

skilled discipline-based readers and on

learners’ unique and often underestimated

strengths

4

Dimensions of Reading Apprenticeship

5

What does a Reading Apprenticeship Classroom Look Like?

• A focus on comprehension and

metacognitive conversation

• A climate of collaboration

• An emphasis on student independence

6

Where is Reading Apprenticeship Implemented?

• RA is making learning visible in. . .

– 35+ California community colleges and

– 10 community colleges in Michigan, Arkansas, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington and Saskatchewan

7

History of Reading Apprenticeship in Community Colleges

• SPECC Project (Strengthening Pre-Collegiate Education in Community Colleges), Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching

• 2004-2008 Reading Apprenticeship Leadership Institutes

• 2006 Faculty Inquiry Groups

8

Faculty Inquiry to Improve Teaching and Learning

• SLI’s Community College Literacy Research Group (CCLRG)

• Lumina Foundation support for CCLRG 2007-2010

• 10 community college teachers representing– CA, WA, PA, TX, MS– English, Science, Developmental Studies, Adult

Basic Education, ESL

9

Student Outcomes

• More reading• Increased engagement and

confidence as readers• Development of a range of strategies to

support comprehension• Higher levels of interaction between and

among teachers and students• Increased retention

10

Teacher Outcomes

• New ways of looking at student thinking and reading difficulties

• Wider repertoire of resources and tools for addressing student reading difficulty

• Increased sense of responsibility for addressing reading and literacy in subject area classes

• Growth in teacher leadership

11

Campus-wide Outcomes

• Increased student focused interactions with colleagues

• Campus-wide emphasis on literacy improvement

• Agreements about a common language and strategic approaches to reading

• Professional learning communities: inquiry and use of protocols for looking at classroom practices, student work

• Interactions with other RA practitioners becomes a source of information sharing, learning and support

• Growth of campus leaders in literacy

12

Outcomes of my own classroom research while introducing RA routines:

ESL 21B, Fall 2007/Spring 2008:

•Increase in reading comprehension scores

•Increase in the variety of reading strategies that students report using

•Shift in “classroom culture”

13

Outcomes of my own classroom research while introducing RA routines:

ESL 251B, Fall 2008

•Students work with more challenging texts and

•Produce more interesting and complex writing.

•Skills-based writing lessons did not produce better grammar or organization than freer written

responses to challenging readings.

14

Teacher training site and complete research reports:

http://tinyurl.com/6oshf4

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