Making connections: the nature and occurrence of links in literacy teaching and learning.
Parr, Judy M. ; McNaughton, Stuart
Introduction
The importance of making connections in the context of learning,
for example from known concepts to those to be acquired, from the
literacy of the home to that of the school, is well documented. As key
literacy processes, reading and writing are seen to have sizeable
complementary elements and the potential to be mutually supportive. But,
research provides little insight into the nature and extent of teacher
actions in making links within the literacy classroom, specifically
those between reading and writing, and between and among texts. The
paper explores this issue in primary classrooms. The idea of
connectedness in reading and writing can be viewed in different ways:
writing related to reading; writer related to reader and text related to
text (Nelson, 1998) or the nature and extent of the relationship between
reading and writing can be examined empirically, theoretically and
pedagogically. The latter is the approach taken to review existing work
to explore the nature of the connection and explanations for why
strengthening connections might be advantageous.
Research that systematically collects data to answer questions has
examined the relationship between the comprehension and the production
of written texts. Reading and writing achievement have been found
consistently to relate to one another statistically to about the same
extent that brothers and sisters share characteristics (e.g. Juel, 1988;
Tierney & Shanahan, 1991). Such studies have been criticised for the
lack of validity of the measures in actually measuring comprehension or
composition but, more importantly, because the measures being compared
do not focus on the same underlying processes and skills; there is no
guidance from a unified theory of language processing (Parodi, 2007). An
effort to match the kinds of questions in the comprehension tests and
the parameters on which the written products were evaluated, using
theory proposed by Van Dijk and Kintsch (1983), produced results that
showed a similar difference between each structural level of language
(micro, macro and super-structural) in both comprehension and
production. There were positive and significant correlations between
comprehension and production at all levels (Parodi, 2007). More
specifically, a five year longitudinal investigation of reading-writing
relationships across multiple levels of language found reciprocal
word-level spelling and reading relationships early in schooling, while
text level comprehension helped to predict text-level composition in
grades 2 to 6 (Abbott, Berninger & Fayol, 2010). Over time, as
students developed, the only significant relationships were between word
reading and text composing and spelling and text comprehension. These
data support the proposition that reading and writing may be related
differently as they change with development (Fitzgerald & Shanahan,
2000).
These relational studies, shortcomings aside, suggest that writing
and reading are related, but often mask the fact that they are
interactive at some level (Shanahan & Lomax, 1986), while a
bidirectional hypothesis assumes that reading and writing may also be
independent (Eisterhold, 1991). At the level of the individual, one can
be a good writer without being a good reader and vice versa, according
to Langer (1986) who sees the different cognitive starting points as
precluding a closer alignment.
The explanation for these relationships is hindered, as noted, by a
lack of a unified theory of language processing and their significance
in terms of learning is largely unexplained. Examining theory allows
some inferences as to how and why connections might be important. From a
theoretical viewpoint, reading and writing both involve constructive
processes. Depending on the theoretical perspective (and it is very
likely that teachers draw on both in their actions), these could be seen
as happening through a process of socially shared cognition (for
example, where, in sharing writing, peers point out the places where
they have difficulty understanding and why) that results in the
individual internalising this knowledge or through a process of becoming
a member of a sustained community of practice (where students, by
engaging in the craft of writing within a community like a classroom
learn by various means including apprenticeship, modelling and feedback,
the 'discourse' of schooled writing) (Wenger, 1998).
Constructive processes for the individual are similar in reading
and writing so performance in one area may strengthen performance in the
other, particularly as it may involve operating in a similar but still
somewhat different context. Readers plan reading around a purpose and
activate prior background knowledge. Writers go through similar
processes; they have a purpose and think about what they know or need to
know to accomplish this purpose. Readers construct their own meaning
from interpreting cues in text; writers construct meaning while
composing so as to convey their desired understandings to a reader. In
composing writers develop their ideas in much the same way that readers
do when they reread something and, in doing so, amend the meaning they
have made of the text. Notably, in specifying cognitive processes in his
1996 model of the writing process, Hayes included text interpretation
and reflection as well as production. In text interpretation, internal
representations are created from linguistic and graphic input while
reflection involves creating new internal representations from existing
ones. Reading is seen by Hayes as a central process in writing and
includes reading to evaluate but also reading of sources to inform
writing. Knowledge acquired in one may support performance in the other.
Linguistic and genre knowledge and schema, stored in long term memory,
are available for both writing and reading. The notion that such
discourse knowledge, thought to be largely acquired from reading, is
important in writing has been supported by research (Olinghouse &
Graham, 2009). So, writing involves reading and both reading and writing
involve similar processes like monitoring one's own meaning making
and knowledge. Logically, articulating and strengthening links between
them should enhance both learners' awareness of how language works
to achieve its communicative purpose and of the processes involved in
reading and writing.
Pedagogically, articulating and building connections provides
students with knowledge to use strategically in both composing and
comprehending. The theoretical traditions of reading and writing
pedagogy have different roots. Writing initially drew on the
Aristotelian rhetorical tradition while reading drew on physiological
and psychological paradigms. Reading and writing have received
overlapping attention, pedagogically, only since the 1970's (Langer
& Allington, 1992; Langer & Flihan, 2000). Historically, some
developments drew reading and writing together (like the attention to
cognition), while others pushed them apart, the notion of centripetal
and centrifugal forces operating (Nelson & Calfee, 1998). With the
building of multi-disciplinary knowledge and through integrative
movements such as comprehension as construction, reader response or
whole language, interconnectedness has been fostered (Nelson &
Calfee, 1998).
A number of instructional approaches and programs in one area, have
been shown (incidentally and by design) to promote improved performance
in the other. For example, Reading Next (Biancarosa & Snow, 2004)
identified intensive writing as a key element of an effective adolescent
literacy program as it improves reading, reinforcing an earlier
assertion that when reading and writing are taught together, they
improve achievement (Tierney & Shanahan, 1991). More specifically, a
limited literature, largely aimed at practitioners, discusses notions
like enabling the borrowing of ideas by students from literature as they
develop their craft (Lancia, 1997) and the positive results from such
(Corden, 2007). This professional literature also discusses the
modelling, demonstrating and using of texts by teachers to highlight
features of the craft of writing (e.g. Harwayne, 1992; Olness, 2005) or
the fact that literature can provide a model whereby through listening,
reading and conversation students learn about text at both a structural
level and at a language use level (Rosemary & Roskos, 2002).
Evidence that instruction in one supports the other comes from a
meta-analytic review by Graham and Hebert (2010). They present evidence
of three major instructional ways in which writing has been shown to
improve reading, namely, (i) having students write about the texts they
read through response, summaries, note-making and answering questions;
(ii) teaching students the writing skills and processes that go into
creating text like the process of writing, text structures, paragraph or
sentence construction skills or teaching spelling, and (iii) increasing
how much students write.
However, a consideration of the few empirical studies that
investigate the extent to which explicit or recognisable connections are
made between reading and writing, and between or among texts, suggests
that, in normal classroom conditions, teachers do not readily articulate
these links. Duncan (1999) observed a sample of New Zealand new entrant
teachers (teachers of students starting school) over a six week period.
These teachers, while espousing the importance of teaching reading and
writing together, made virtually no explicit connections for the
students in their classrooms. Similarly, Soter and colleagues (2008)
concluded, from their analysis of discourse features across small group
discussion approaches in US elementary classrooms, that the incidence of
'extra-textual' connections, as they termed the affective,
inter-textual and shared knowledge connection, was 'barely
apparent' (p. 383). In the pedagogical literature there is little
evidence of the nature and extent of connections made between reading
and writing, between readers and writers or between texts. Although
there is consensus that reading and writing are linked and that they
have been shown to be mutually facilitative in the development of
literacy abilities and the learning of content, there are no developed
models in the literature for using this interconnectedness in ways that
demonstrably foster teaching and learning (Close, Hull & Langer,
2005). We do not have pedagogical models for using the relationship in
productive ways; we lack frameworks to see how to translate the
relationship into practice. The current study presents, as a starting
point, a framework for considering the pedagogical moves of teachers in
making links in literacy learning settings, in particular those made
between reading and writing.
Method
The initial work was conceptual and focussed on developing a
framework as a lens through which to view the nature and site of links
between reading and writing. This framework was tested through use in
classroom observations, then a revised framework applied to a corpus
comprising transcriptions of both writing and reading lessons to examine
utility and explore normal classroom practice.
The framework
Through a review of literature, the draft framework was generated.
It was tested by a group of literacy leaders in a cluster of schools
interested in promoting reading-writing links. They trialled the
framework in 10 classrooms, using it to categorise and describe the
nature of any links they observed teachers making, and provided us with
feedback that resulted in some minor changes.
Applying the framework to classroom practice
Participants and context
Two corpora consisting of transcripts of literacy lessons of
teachers of students in Years 1 to 8 of schooling were analysed. This
was essentially a convenience sample where sessions that were selected
were those that were predominantly teacher-led. One group of teachers (N
= 16) was taking guided reading (Smith & Elley, 1994) with a small
group of students and the second group (N = 12) were conducting a
writing lesson where the teacher was modelling writing (including using
text as a model) or leading either a whole class or a small group
session in shared writing or similar. Note that many of the texts used
by teachers in both settings are locally produced, designed to connect
to students' social and cultural backgrounds. The guided reading
lesson teachers were part of a literacy research-practice collaboration
where the particular focus was to enhance the reading comprehension of
students (McNaughton, MacDonald, Amituanai-Toloa, Lai & Farry, 2006)
and all of the seven participating schools from which the sample of
teachers came were in the lowest category of schools nationally in terms
of socio-economic classification of the area from which they draw
students. The writing lesson teachers were from the five schools, part
of a national Literacy Professional Development project where they had
identified writing as their specific focus (as opposed to a
reading-focus); these schools were from the sample of schools selected
as cases for the research accompanying the professional development
project (Parr, Timperley, Reddish, Jesson & Adams, 2006). These
latter schools ranged in socio-economic terms but tended to be mid-range
schools in terms of national categorisations. Both groups were engaged
in literacy professional learning projects which were school based, job
embedded and designed around the demonstrated learning needs of teachers
in relation to the needs of their students. Both were about a year into
the project (a planned three year project in the case of the reading
sample teachers and a two year project for the writing sample teachers).
Procedure
In both groups teachers were observed directly: one group wore
radio microphones and one group was video recorded. Both sets of
recordings were subsequently transcribed. Teachers were being observed
by literacy experts both from within and outside their school in order
to provide feedback about key aspects of their practice. In each case,
teachers were not aware at the time of observation that a subsequent
specific focus of analysis would be reading and writing links.
Analysis
Analysis of the transcripts using the framework (explained and
illustrated below) allowed a test of whether it was adequate to describe
instances, specifically the nature and context, of links. Then, applying
the revised framework to transcripts provided an indication of typical
practice and also a comparison of that practice in the two literacy
instruction settings, guided reading and writing.
The lessons selected, while predominantly teacher-led, varied in
both length and amount of teacher input. To take account of this
variability, as we were interested in teacher focused interactions, the
total word count for each transcript was obtained and the instances of
links were calculated as a rate per 1000 words (the transcripts ranged
in length from just under 1000 to over 7,000 words). The site of
connection was problematic to identify from transcripts. Without a
shared history of classroom events, it was difficult to know if a
reference to a text was to a previously produced student text or a
published text we did not recognise. Similarly, a reference to planned
writing may not be readily perceived if the planned writing had been
introduced previously and was not identified as such in the transcript.
Consequently, reliability between raters for these categorisations was
initially low. Providing exemplars raised the inter-rater percentage
agreement to around 60 per cent but this is still far from ideal so the
results should be regarded as tentative. Making the decision in real
time rather than from transcripts would allow checking with the teacher,
while observing over an extended period of time is likely to permit more
certainty in identifying the sites. The inter-rater reliability with
respect to the coding of the nature of the link made was relatively
robust. Where both raters identified the occurrence of a link, agreement
as to its nature was high (>95%). However, in a small percentage of
cases (8%), only one of the raters identified a link being made.
Results and comments
The framework
The framework has two dimensions: sites or context where links are
made, and types of link.
Sites
The three major 'textual' sites where links are made are:
(i) published text to writing, for example from a shared book the class
is reading to a piece of writing planned or in process; (ii) student
writing to text whereby a piece of writing or the knowledge acquired
from it is linked to a current reading text, and (iii) text to text
which covers links between and among texts (produced by others). This
latter site is not specifically a site where links are made between
reading-writing but may involve an examination of what the writers of
the texts did and why and may relate to current or future writing. In
all cases, text is viewed broadly as print, electronic, oral, visual or
multi-media.
Type of link
The second dimension of the framework concerns the type of link;
the nature of the link. Four different types of links are proposed:
content or context link, structural or how language works link, process
or strategy link, and real world knowledge or prior experience link.
These are illustrated with examples from the classroom data. As always
with transcriptions, the examples lose a little of the sense they had in
the real time, contextualised classroom setting.
Content or context link
Here the connection focuses on comparing or contrasting content
(e.g. themes, ideas, concepts, arguments, moral/message, setting,
characters).
Example: The teacher is working with the lowest reading group (NZ
primary students are mostly grouped flexibly according to the level of
book they are currently able to read independently; most books used in
the early years of NZ primary schools are categorised by teachers and
placed into a level) in a guided reading session. She has seized a
teaching moment and taken an opportunity that presented itself when the
young student skipped ahead looking at the pictures in the book and
noticed the snake. The student asked whether 'Rags' (in the
title) was the dog or the snake. Realising that s/he is thinking about
the previous book where the snake was the main character, the teacher
takes this confusion and turns it into a teaching point. The point comes
from the fact (presumably) that the books have some of the same
characters (as books often do at early reading levels) but in different
stories, different characters are fore-grounded and narrate the story
from their viewpoint.
T: All right let's have a look at the contents page. Chapter
1--Meeting Rags. Now there's some clues in here. Makes me want to
ask who is Rags? What does it make you want to ask? Does it make you
want to ask anything Clarissa?
S: Is Rags the dog or the snake?
T: Is Rags the dog or the snake? What makes you talk about the
snake? Why did you say the snake?
S: He's in the wood. He's in the pile of wood.
T: Oh, you've jumped to Chapter 4. Oh, ok. You always do that
to me. You always jump, that's ok.
So, obviously the story's like the one we read yesterday. It
has a narrator. The narrator tells it from their point of view. Who told
the story yesterday?
S: The snake.
T: The snake told the story. Who's going to tell the story
today?
S: The puppy.
T: It might be the puppy. Well do you think we should start reading
and find out?
Structural or how language works link
Connections of this type concern identifying how texts work,
largely organisationally and linguistically, to achieve their purpose.
They involve features of text like the elements of structure at text or
local level (main point, topic sentence or elements of story schema like
complication and resolution) or language resources like choice of
particular words, the use of figurative language or the use of
grammatical structures like passive constructions or tense.
Example: Here the teacher is making a link between the text they
are reading (the second chapter of 'No safe harbour' by David
Hill) and a movie text that has a similar setting/ context. The link,
however, is to do with the schema structure of the narrative and the
notion of build-up to a climax. It could also be argued that the link
was helping them to see how to activate a schema they already had (for
future use in both reading and writing) which is a link to do with
process (schemas help by making the load on memory lighter so there is
more capacity for higher level thinking).
T: Just quickly, tell the person next to you what you think is
going to happen next.
S: [talking]
T: OK thank you. What do you think B ... could happen next?
S1: Um on the way the ferry starts leaving they might hit a sand
bar or something and they might have to turn at the right place and
smash into the sand bar and tip over or else it could just crash beside
some rocks on the wharf.
T: Gee that's a lot to happen on one page isn't it
[Teacher laughs] Well done.
S2: Or they could both drown.
T: Yes only chapter two but yes good thinking. J ...?
S3: Well they might start rescuing each other.
T: Yeah I know that you all know that the boat's going to sink
and as someone just said it's on the front. But I don't think
it's going to start sinking in chapter two. Why do I think
it's not ...?
S4: And swim all the way back to the wharf.
T: Why do you think that L ...?
S4: Cos um if they sink they'll probably die and there
won't be anything to say at the end.
T: Could be ... and do you think the author's going to want to
keep us in suspense a little bit longer just yet?
S: [A few students say ...] Yeah.
T: Okay if you went to the movies ... who has seen Titanic?
S: [Some students raise their hands]
T: Like from the minute Jack got on the boat, did you just want it
to sink next?
S: [A few students say No]
T: Did a whole three hour movie have to keep going first?
S: [A few students say Yeah]
T: OK it's the same, probably the same with this book.
Process/strategy link
In this category, connections are made between the use of processes
of reasoning or problem-solving strategies used to make meaning in
reading and writing. These strategies and processes may involve
predicting, questioning or searching for evidence to confirm or
disconfirm. Examples include showing that the act of summarizing to
capture the gist is used both to aid comprehension and to make decisions
about adding to or revising written text. Another example would be
indicating that the activation and use of schemas from long term memory
similarly aids text construction as well as comprehension.
Example: In this lesson the students are using a familiar and loved
text 'Greedy Cat' (Cowley, 1997) to generate some content for
an argument that they are going to write. They are learning to pose
questions in order to produce argument points to write in the same way
that a reader might generate questions in order to locate material in a
text to test predictions or to establish content to help comprehension.
T: What are we thinking about when we write arguments? The main
things we're thinking about. S ...?
S: Make sure you give your opinion
T: Yes, you write your opinion. What else, N ...?
S: Reasons?
(There are a series of interchanges around why reasons are given
and around the notion of ordering reasons by importance)
T: OK. Now we know Greedy Cat is tough on cat doors. We know he
doesn't have a great diet- he eats out of garbage bins! But does he
really need to go on a diet? What clues are there in the text about why
he might need a diet? Ask the same sort of questions that we do
sometimes when we are testing out our predictions about a story and what
is going to happen. What question are you going to ask, Q ...?
S: In the picture he is like, fat so maybe this means he--not
getting through the cat door and breaking it?
T: So what might you ask yourself to help you look in the text for
some reasons why Greedy Cat needs to diet?
S: Ummm. If he's being fat, what problems does he have?
T: Good one. See how we ask questions to look for reasons to
support the argument about why he needs to go on a diet? If he's
got problems being fat, he needs a diet. Just like you think up
questions to test out when you are reading.
Real world knowledge link (prior experience)
This type of connection to experience or real world knowledge is
not specifically one between reading and writing but, commonly, one to
reading or to writing. The connection between such 'text' and
either reading or writing may be emotional, experiential or
autobiographical. Activating prior knowledge may aid comprehension or
aid retrieval of relevant content in writing.
Example: This extract is from a Year 7 and 8 classroom where the
teacher aims to help understanding of the text through an analogy to
something the students are likely to understand through their
experience.
T: It could get stuck to the branches and the leaves. That's a
bit like the leaves. Have you ever put a um, something like a carnation
into dye and seen what happens? Did you guys do that last year?
T: Yeah you could. So what's, how does the flower turn green
or yellow or purple?
S1: Because the dye soaks up all, wait the leaves soak up all the
dye.
T: Yeah but there's the flower eh? So how does the flower end
up like that?
S2: Oh, it soaks it into the petals.
T: Yeah it does. So why I'm saying is because
sometimes the poisons and stuff get sucked up through the roots, up
through the stalk of it, and into the tree. So that's one way too
that poisons can get soaked up. [Teacher attends to student with hand
up] Yeah?
S3: Sister, about the mangroves, can they die when they collect the
poisonous?
T: Oh yes if they got poisons into them they would die just like
anything else. So you can kill them. So it's probably partly they
absorb some of them into them and partly they do what you said with the
leaves. What else do mangroves do to protect the land?
Instances of links in typical classroom practice
The first analysis presented considers the sites of the connections
made in both guided reading and a largely teacher-led segment of a
writing lesson. The second analysis concerns the nature of the
connections made in reading and writing. These data are presented by
focus (writing or reading), then a comparison is made.
Sites connected
The sites of connection in guided reading were patterned as might
be expected. A significant number (almost 90%) were made between texts
(TT). This is shown in Figure 1 which presents the occurrence of
linkages between sites per thousand words. This text to text reference
appears to show a much higher occurrence than that noted by Soter and
colleagues (2008) in all forums, save Literature Circles, although
direct comparison is difficult. A very small number of links in guided
reading sessions were made explicitly between the current, or another,
reading text and writing (TW) (around 10 per cent). Even if some
references may have been wrongly classified, given the difficulty of
inference from transcript data, clearly teachers were not utilising the
potential to make connections to planned writing.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Interestingly, in the writing lessons, the site of most linkages
(71%) was categorised as text to text, with the connection of these
texts to writing implicit, rather than stated. This may be because, in
teacher-led aspects of the writing lessons, teachers were often
preparing for writing by generating ideas and content from various
texts, including oral texts. The unstated assumption was that these
ideas were to be 'used' in the writing that was to follow but
to be classified as text to writing, the link had to be made explicitly.
Given transcripts are located at one point in time and such references
could be made prior to or following the lesson segment, this may
over-estimate text to text references in writing and underestimate text
to writing references. However, specifically selected texts were also
used as exemplars that illustrated the purpose and functional form of
the writing being undertaken. Sometimes such texts were student pieces;
sometimes short 'cameos', specifically selected or written by
the teacher to exemplify a particular aspect of writing and, at other
times, they were texts the students had read and shared- short stories,
novels, biographies and pieces of transactional writing. Given such
practice, it might be expected that more links might be expected to be
noted from text to the writing in hand. The remainder of the linkages in
transcripts were from the writing being undertaken, including the
modelling by the teacher of constructing a text, to existing texts.
Types of links
The mean occurrence of the different types of links, calculated per
1000 words, together with the standard deviations as an indication of
the variation across classrooms is shown in Table 1. In the guided
reading sessions, with respect to the nature of the link, the majority
were to content or context, and to prior experience in terms of real
world knowledge. The category of content or context link accounted for
31 per cent of all links made and links to prior knowledge, 30 per cent.
This latter link is something teachers in New Zealand, especially those
with a diverse student body, do readily in such a situation to activate
prior knowledge to assist with comprehension or perhaps when they are
introducing new vocabulary. The other two types of links, to how
language works and to processes and strategies, accounted for around 20
per cent each. An analysis (Friedman's non-parametric test for
k-related samples) showed a non-significant difference between the types
of links made in reading (F (3, 16) = 5.549, p > .05).
In writing, the greatest number of links, on average, made
reference to aspects of how language works and the rate of reference to
these was greater than to other types. About 44 per cent of links made
were of this type. Such links that referred to structure or use of
language may have been particularly salient to the teachers observed as
they were, at this point in the professional development, working with
detailed, diagnostic scoring rubrics for writing. The next largest
category was links to prior, real world experience (32%). Fewer links
were of the types concerning content or context (12%) or links
concerning processes and strategies (11%). Unlike in reading, there was,
in the writing lessons, a significant difference between types of links
made (F (3, 12) = 16.210, p < .01).
It seems that guided reading and writing lessons, by their nature,
each offer different opportunities to make links. Again, the small
sample size needs to be borne in mind but a repeated measures analysis
of variance showed a significant interaction between type of link and
teaching focus, either guided reading or writing (F (3,78) = 3.385, p
<. 05). The likely differences by type are shown in Figure 2.
Bonferroni pair-wise comparisons indicated that this difference between
reading and writing focused lessons occurred in terms of type 1 links,
those referring to content or context. In Figure 2, there appears to be
a difference between reading and writing for type 2, references to how
texts work, with more references in writing. This difference approached
significance (p = .071).
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
Discussion
It appears from the analyses presented that, overall, the extent to
which teachers make links in literacy instruction settings where they
are leading the learning as in guided reading and teacher-led writing is
low. Considered in averages, this rate was about one link per thousand
words of classroom discourse. In a similar way to Duncan's (1999)
new entrant (kindergarten) teachers (who all professed the belief that
reading and writing were linked and should be presented as complementary
processes, but only one of whom on one occasion made such a link
explicit in six weeks of observation), the teachers in the current study
were not explicitly linking reading and writing in their instructional
setting, as far as could be determined from the analysis of a
transcript. While not suggesting that the frequency of links marks
quality connections for learning, data from the classroom transcripts do
suggest that optimal use is not being made of the opportunities to
connect something new to something students already understand, a text
read and discussed to a piece of writing that is planned, for example.
The data indicated that teachers mostly make links from text to the
'text' of real world experiences. This may be a phenomenon
more associated with the New Zealand context where the texts used in
guided reading, in particular, may be conducive to such. This is because
many of the quality texts available for selection are locally
constructed to be particularly relevant socially and culturally. This
selection and construction of texts is designed to facilitate the use of
experiential schemas to aid vocabulary acquisition, understanding of
structural features of text and comprehension. Making these experiential
links has been shown to enhance learning, particularly in cases where
students come from different cultural backgrounds (Si'ilata,
Dreaver, Parr, Timperley & Meissel, 2012). It requires knowledge
about linguistic and cultural background, but little specific language
content knowledge on the part of the teacher. Arguably, increasing the
instances of links to organisational/ structural or other features of
language and to processes and strategies could be efficacious in terms
of student understanding and performance in reading and writing but
perhaps teacher knowledge for this purpose is lacking (Wong Fillmore
& Snow, 2002).
The details of how best to make these links are sparse. Empirical
work of Parodi (2007) suggests that links be made at a macro-structural
or text level. However, contrary to this, the work of Abbott and
colleagues suggest that, particularly for younger students, the links be
made at the same level of text. Distilling from a plethora of findings,
they conclude that connections across writing and reading may be easier
to create within the same level of language. Making connections across
levels and across reading and writing may be challenging early in
schooling, although older students may be able to do this.
The framework presented in this article is an attempt to provide
some detail through the specification and exemplification of the type of
link that might be made explicitly for students. There are several
aspects that arise from the study regarding refinements or extension of
both the framework and the testing of it. If the framework is to be used
for professional learning, then perhaps the category of language links
needs to be subdivided into language links at different levels of text-
micro and macro- or structural/ organisational and the use of language
resources. While sites of connection and types of connection were
considered, a third dimension that needs to be considered concerns the
degree of explicitness with which the link is made and the nature of
support for the link such as through the use of artefacts. Applying the
framework for research or professional learning in real-time is likely
to make decisions of categorisation easier as there are multiple cues in
the classroom situation (that are not in a transcript) and the
possibility of checking with teachers and students.
The framework is designed to delineate the specific ways in which
links might be made to foster the teaching of literacy. It is helpful in
diagnosing individual teacher patterns of practice with regard to making
links in order to support development of facility in making a range of
types of links. Such an exercise could serve to sensitise teachers to
what they actually do. It would allow them to reflect on how they
connect the sites of reading and writing in a primary classroom where,
in our context, ideally literacy overlaps into content areas.
Ultimately, the aim of research should be to examine the relationship
between the nature and degree of explicit reading and writing links in
the classroom and student understanding. Checking whether students
perceive the link being made and how they are able to utilise it, is an
important area for further research. The goal would be to examine
patterns of progress and achievement in reading and writing under
conditions where explicit links are made and deliberately taught.
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Judy M. Parr and Stuart McNaughton
University of Auckland
Judy Parr is Professor and Head of the School of Curriculum and
Pedagogy in the Faculty of Education at the University of Auckland.
Judy's research focuses on literacy, particularly writing, its
development and assessment and on enhancing teacher practice in order to
improve student literacy. Publications span literacy, assessment,
technology, professional learning and school change.
Stuart McNaughton is a Professor and Director of the Woolf Fisher
Research Centre at the University of Auckland. His research interests
are in literacy and language development, the design of effective
educational programs for culturally and linguistically diverse
communities and cultural processes in development. Publications include
research on development in family and school settings; instructional
design; and intervention models in large scale interventions.
Table 1. Mean occurrence per 1000 words of different types of
links in guided reading and writing lessons
Type of link Lesson focus Mean Std. Dev. N
1. Content Reading 1.42 1.26 16
Writing 0.49 0.53 12
Total 1.02 1.10 28
2. Language Reading 0.92 1.29 16
Writing 1.72 0.82 12
Total 1.26 1.17 28
3. Process Reading 0.86 1.00 16
Writing 0.46 0.88 12
Total 0.69 0.96 28
4. Experience Reading 1.34 1.36 16
Writing 1.21 0.51 12
Total 1.29 1.07 28