Abstract
The wide adoption of the new Common Core State Standards (CCSS) in the U.S. has increased expectations for all teachers to prepare all learners to read and write in academic ways. More knowledge is needed about instructional approaches that may lead adolescent English learners (ELs) to meet this goal. Developing academic literacy practices represents an acute challenge for adolescent ELs. This article describes an eight-week instructional unit in a U.S. urban public high school that investigated the effectiveness of using the genre-based Reading to Learn approach to support 20 adolescent ELs in learning to write academic-style persuasive essays. Results indicated a statistically significant increase from pretest to posttest in the participants' effective use of the linguistic resources that function to create persuasion in an academic way. These findings suggest that the Reading to Learn approach may be one way to support adolescent ELs in developing academic literacy practices. FREE author podcast © 2014 International Reading Association.
Author supplied keywords
- Action research, teacher research
- Adolescence
- Comprehension
- Content literacy
- English language learners, English learners, English as a second language, English for speakers of other languages
- Genre studies
- Genres
- Instructional models
- Instructional strategies, teaching strategies
- Language learners
- Linguistics
- Literature
- Mixed methods
- Research methodology
- Semiotics
- Sociocultural
- Strategies, methods, and materials
- Text features, text structure
- Text types
- Theoretical perspectives
- Writing
- Writing strategies
- text features
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Ramos, K. (2014). Teaching adolescent ELs to write academic-style persuasive essays. Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 57(8), 655–665. https://doi.org/10.1002/jaal.303
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