authentic literacy activities

Upload: jhiv-pie

Post on 13-Jan-2016

12 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Authentic Literacy Activities for the ESL classroom

TRANSCRIPT

  • 344 2006 International Reading Association (pp. 344355) doi:10.1598/RT.60.4.4

    NELL K . DUKEVICTORIA PURCELL-GATES

    LEIGH A . HALLCATHY TOWER

    Authentic literacy activities fordeveloping comprehension and writing

    Explore what is meant by authentic

    literacy and discover how this approach can

    spark reading and writing across genres and

    subject areas.

    Ms. Jones (all names are pseudonyms)hushed her excited second graders. Shebegan to read aloud a letter from the di-rector of the local nature center. All of the studentsrecalled their recent trip to the pond as part of theirscience unit on pond life.

    Dear Boys and Girls, I hope you enjoyed your visit to our pond. I en-

    joyed answering your many good questions about whatlives in ponds. After you left, I thought about all of theother children who visit us and who also have many ofthe same questions. I thought it might be a good idea tohave a brochure for them with answers to some of theirquestions. I am writing to ask if you would prepare abrochure like this. It could be called something likeQuestions and Answers About Pond Life. You couldinclude some of your questions that you had before youvisited us. If you write this, I will have many copiesprinted that we can put in the main office. That way,people can pick one up when they come or as they areleaving. I hope you can do this for us.

    Sincerely, Mr. Hernandez

    After a quick vote of approval, the studentswent to work. They studied similar brochures col-lected from museums and other sites of natural sci-ence. They worked in groups to brainstormquestions for the brochure, after which they re-searched answers by reading from a variety of sci-

    ence texts. Finally, they wrote drafts of their textuntil they were satisfied it would serve as a usefulinformation brochure for the public. Their finaldraft was published as a brochure and displayed ina stand in the front office of the nature center,where many visitors appreciated its availability.

    Authentic literacyThe second graders in Ms. Joness science

    class were actively involved in what we considerto be authentic literacy. We documented this inci-dent, and many others, over the course of a two-year experimental research study of genre learningin second- and third-grade science classes. In thisarticle, we provide a brief introduction to authen-tic literacy and to the research study. We then dis-cuss theory and research behind authentic literacy.Finally, we share lessons from teachers about set-ting up authentic literacy activities in their class-rooms. We hope to provide teachers with manyideas for their own practice.

    The terms authentic literacy and authenticreading and writing are familiar to many teachers.We are encouraged to include authentic literacy ac-tivities in our instruction. Students, we believe,need to read authentic literature and to engage inauthentic writing. But what is authentic literacy? Inmany ways, the term is a pedagogical one. Peoplewho are not involved with issues of instruction donot use it. Yet to many teachers, authentic literacymeans reading and writing that is unlike the kinddone in school.

  • Authentic literacy activities for developing comprehension and writing 345

    In the research literature, authentic reading hasprimarily been defined in terms of childrens litera-ture (Hiebert, 1994). Authentic writing is often de-fined as writing on topics of ones choice, whichcan take the form of a personal narrative or story.When asked to define authentic literacy, the vastmajority of preservice and inservice teachers re-spond with notions of interesting or motivating,relevant topics, fun, or classical and contem-porary childrens literature. Returning to the sce-nario of Ms. Joness second graders and theirresponse to a request for a pond-life brochure,these definitions seem incomplete. They also arenot consistent or specific enough to be sufficientlyuseful for teachers or researchers.

    We confronted these problems of defining au-thenticity when conducting a study that involvedengaging students in authentic literacy activities.We needed a definition of authentic literacy thatwould help teachers in our study create authenticliteracy activities and that would help us recognizethese activities when we saw themwe needed anoperational definition. We give this definition, andmany more examples of authentic literacy activi-ties, later in this article.

    The studyOur two-year study involved 26 second- and

    third-grade teachers and their students from schooldistricts serving families of low and middle socio-economic status (see Purcell-Gates, Duke, &Martineau, 2007). Our interest was in the develop-ment of students ability to comprehend and com-pose informational and procedural texts in science(definitions of informational and procedural textsare provided later). All of the teachers in our studyworked with us to introduce authentic literacy ac-tivities with informational and procedural texts inscience and to understand the construct of authen-tic literacy.

    Authenticity theoryWhy were we so committed to including au-

    thenticity in all the classrooms in this study? Whydo we believe that authentic literacy activitiesshould be part of any instructional model designedto teach comprehension or writing? We believe in

    theories of situated learningthat learning hap-pens in particular contexts (Brown, Collins, &Duguid, 1989), that these contexts make a big dif-ference to learning, and that it is difficult to transferlearning to new contexts. Language is best acquiredwithin functional contexts (Gee, 1992; Hymes,1974). Students learn language not in abstract, de-contextualized terms but in application, in a contextthat language is really for. For students, languagelearning occurs best when the learning contextmatches the real functional context. Scholars froma range of theoretical and pedagogical orientationsagree that authentic experience is essential to genreand discourse learning (Delpit, 1992; Lemke,1994; New London Group, 1996; Reid, 1987).However, there is little agreement, or clarity, onthe conceptualization of authentic literacy.

    Authenticity researchThe extent of the research base for authentici-

    ty depends a lot on how authenticity is defined.Given the definition we propose, and focusing onliteracy only, the research base is not large.However, in a nationwide U.S. study of adult learn-ers, researchers found that adults in programs withmore authentic literacy activities reported (a) read-ing and writing more often in their out-of-schoollives, and (b) reading and writing more complextexts (Purcell-Gates, Degener, Jacobson, & Soler,2002). And the longer the students remained inthese programs, the more this was true.

    In our study we, too, found support for authen-tic literacy activities (Purcell-Gates & Duke, 2004).We monitored the authenticity of literacy activitieswith informational and procedural texts in scienceweekly. Two or three times each year we also as-sessed students ability to comprehend and to write(compose) informational and procedural texts inscience. We found that those teachers who includ-ed more authentic literacy activities more of thetime had students who showed higher growth inboth comprehension and writing.

    Other effective approaches to literacy educa-tion include activities we would classify as authen-tic, although they may not use the termauthenticity. For example, Concept-OrientedReading Instruction, or CORI (Guthrie, Wigfield,& Perencevich, 2004), involves students reading

  • The Reading Teacher Vol. 60, No. 4 December 2006/January 2007346

    and writing trade books and other authentic textsfor the purpose of learning about something of in-terest to them and communicating what they havelearned to others. Other approaches, and certainlymany individual classroom teachers, involve stu-dents in activities we would characterize as au-thentic.

    An operational definition We conceptualize authentic literacy activities

    in the classroom as those that replicate or reflectreading and writing activities that occur in the livesof people outside of a learning-to-read-and-writecontext and purpose. Each authentic literacy activ-ity has a writer and a readera writer who is writ-ing to a real reader and a reader who is readingwhat the writer wrote.

    To judge the authenticity of a literacy activity,we look at two dimensions: purpose or functionand text. Authentic purpose or function means thatthe activity serves a true communicative purposefor example, reading informational text to informoneself or to answer ones own questions, or writ-ing to provide information for someone who wantsor needs itin addition to teaching and learningparticular skills or content. To be authentic, a text(written or read) must be like texts that are usedby readers and writers outside of a learning-to-read-or-write context (i.e., to serve communicativepurposes or functions). For example, a newspaperread in class must be either a newspaper broughtin from outside the classroom or a newspaper spe-cially written for the classroom that is close toidentical in form, language, and so on to one fromoutside the classroom.

    These authentic texts and purposes are con-trasted, within our frame, with those texts writtenprimarily to teach reading and writing skills for thepurposes of learning to read and write or to devel-op literacy skills, strategies, values, and attitudesliteracy activity we term school only. Prototypicalschool-only texts include worksheets, spelling lists,short passages with comprehension questions,flashcards, and lists of sentences to be punctuated.School-only purposes for reading these texts are tolearn or improve reading and writing skills. School-only purposes for writing these texts would be to as-sist in the teaching and learning of literacy skills.

    Authentic texts can be read or written withschool-only purposes, rendering the literacy activ-ity less authentic (i.e., more school only). For ex-ample, novels can be read in preparation for anexam on comprehension and interpretive skills,news articles can be read to identify new vocabu-lary words, or fliers can be composed to complete ahistory unit with an innovative assignment de-signed to link to art and language arts. Each ofthese examples includes an authentic text read for aschool-only purpose. To be considered highly au-thentic, a literacy activity must include an authentictext read or written for an authentic purpose.Authentic literacy activity in the classroom is al-ways accompanied by school-only (or literacyteaching and learning) purposes, simply becausethat is the overall purpose of schoolteaching andlearning. However, literacy activities can becomeauthentic for students if teachers attend to thoseaspects we have just discussed: text types and pur-poses for reading and writing them.

    In our study, the focus was on authentic litera-cy activities with informational and procedural textin science. We defined the purpose of information-al text as being to convey information about thenatural or social world, with the text typically writ-ten by someone presumed to be more knowledge-able on the subject for someone presumed to beless so. We defined the purpose of procedural textas being to tell how to do something, with the texttypically written by someone who knows how toperform that action for someone who does not.Authentic uses had to include these purposes forreading and writing informational and proceduraltexts in addition to the instructional purposes heldby the teachers.

    We used a 3-point scale to rate the degree towhich the purpose of an informational text beingwritten or read in the classroom mirrors the actualpurpose of an informational text (e.g., to learnsomething that you want to know about a topic).We also rated the degree of authenticity of text on a3-point scale. For literacy activities involving writ-ing we did not rate the authenticity of the text. Inorder for the activity to be rated (i.e., for it to beclassified as informational or procedural) it had toinvolve actual and therefore authentic information-al or procedural text. Our rating categories for pur-pose and text are described on the authenticityrating sheet (see Figure 1).

  • Examples of literacy activities and how theywould be rated are provided in Table 1. As you cansee, highly authentic reading and writing of infor-mational text involves seeking and acquiring infor-mation (for reading) and providing information (forwriting). Authentic reading and writing of proce-dural text involves doing procedures (for reading)and enabling the doing of procedures (for writing).

    Classroom activities: Lessons fromteachers

    The remainder of this article focuses on howteachers in our study established conditions for au-thentic reading and writing of informational andprocedural texts in science. These portraits are

    based on our analysis of literacy activities rated 3(highly authentic) for both purpose and text. Theteachers participated in summer workshops devot-ed to building an understanding of authentic litera-cy, and each teacher was coached once a week forthe entire year she or he was part of the study.

    Over time, the teachers developed many differ-ent strategies for establishing authentic literacyevents in science. We identified and categorizedthem in order to share these strategies with otherteachers.

    Authentic reading of informational text inscience

    To establish authentic contexts and purposesfor the reading and writing of informational text,the teachers looked for different ways to generate

    Authentic literacy activities for developing comprehension and writing 347

    FIGURE 1Authenticity rating sheet

    Brief description of activity, including (a) text students are reading, writing, or listening to, and (b) purpose of stu-dents reading, writing, or listening:

    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Authenticity of purpose

    Rating: 3 2 1

    3 = This reading, writing, or listening-to-text purpose exists in the lives of people outside a classroom, or it is asauthentic as the use of that genre for that purpose can be.

    2 = This reading, writing, or listening-to-text purpose exists in the lives of people outside a classroom, but it dif-fers in that for reading the impetus is less personal and for writing the audience is less compelling.

    1 = This reading, writing, or listening-to-text purpose is identified by its absence of any purpose beyond schoolwork. This takes different forms depending on the genre and process (reading or writing).

    Authenticity of text

    Rating: 3 2 1

    3 = This text type occurs naturally in the lives of people outside a classroom. You can find it in bookstores or or-der it for home delivery. This category also includes texts that are written primarily for instructional purposesbut that closely mimic the naturally occurring textsthe only difference being the publishers audience.

    2 = This text is written primarily for use in schools and, although it mimics to an extent the genre style, form, andpurpose of those texts that do occur naturally outside school, it includes enough school stuff to be recogniz-able. This type would include texts that have comprehension questions, special vocabulary sections, and per-haps even Checking What You Have Learned sections. These texts are hybrid forms reflecting school andauthentic genres in different combinations and emphases.

    1 = This text would not occur anywhere except in a school or other teaching and learning contexts. It is written toteach skills and is used only for learning and practicing skills. You may be able to purchase these texts instores but they reflect a skills-learning purpose.

    Total authenticity rating: _________

  • The Reading Teacher Vol. 60, No. 4 December 2006/January 2007348

    TABLE 1Examples of activities with differing levels of authenticity of purpose

    Activites and text type Rating 3 Rating 2 Rating 1

    Reading activities, informational text

    The teacher suggested thatthe kindergartners wouldlike to have informationbooks on reptiles. She askedfor topics and divided theclass into small groups. Eachgroup read to find informa-tion to put in the books forthe kindergartners.

    The class went outside tocollect rocks from the play-ground. When they re-turned, the teachersuggested writing an infor-mation pamphlet about therocks at the school for par-ents who might not knowabout them. The studentsread informational textabout rocks and preparedthe pamphlets to takehome to their parents.

    In the science unit weath-er, the teacher chose fivetopics or concepts relatedto weather and created fivecenters, each focusing onone concept. At each cen-ter, the teacher placed in-formational texts on thesetopics, accompanied byreading guides that the stu-dents used to find out thedesignated informationfrom the texts. Students ro-tated through the centers.

    The teacher demonstratedhow to find answers toquestions that studentshad been assigned to an-swer and she talkedthrough her thinking as shelooked for the answer in aninformation book, locatedthe information, and readthe answer to the class.

    Students were assigned aninformation book aboutwhere insects live. Theywere to find all the high-lighted vocabulary, writeout the words, and writethe definition of each wordor word phrase as providedby the book.

    Students were given an in-formational text on torna-does. The teacher led themthrough a lesson whereeach heading was readaloud and the studentswere then asked to predictwhat the section followingthe heading would beabout. They read to confirmtheir hypotheses.

    While the students watchedand listened, the teacher dida lesson on indexes. She putfive words on the chalkboardand demonstrated how tolook in the index of aninformation book, find aword, and locate the pagenumber where the wordappears.

    Following an activity usingowl pellets, students wereasked to generate questionsabout owls and their habits.These questions were listedon chart paper and grouped.Small groups of studentswere assigned to read infor-mational texts to find an-swers to the questions,which were then sharedwith the class as a whole.

    The day following the erup-tion of a volcano in Mexico,a discussion arose aboutvolcanoes and how theyhappen. Students disagreedabout where the lava comesfrom and how hot it is. Theteacher put together agroup of information booksabout volcanoes. She dis-tilled the questions and as-signed students to work inpairs to read for the an-swers to the questions.

    A student brought in asnake skin to class. Severalquestions arose from thegroup about why snakesshed their skin and howlong it takes to grow newskin. The teacher found aninformation book aboutsnakes, located the an-swers, and read those sec-tions to the class.

    (continued)

  • Authentic literacy activities for developing comprehension and writing 349

    TABLE 1Examples of activities with differing levels of authenticity of purpose (continued)

    Activites and text type Rating 3 Rating 2 Rating 1

    Writing activities, informational text

    Reading activities, procedural text

    The teacher led the class incomposing an informationpamphlet about what wasdiscovered in the dirt in theplayground. She elicitedtext from the studentsand wrote it on chart pa-per. The pamphlet was tobe sent home to parents,for display and also to pro-vide information about theschool playground.

    Students contributed as agroup to an informationpamphlet that was postedas a class project in thehallway on Back-to-SchoolNight. The topic wasassigned as part of thedistrict-mandated curricu-lum on force and motion.The teacher did the actualwriting.

    The teacher suggestedwriting information booksfor the kindergartners. Sheelicited questions from theclass on what they thoughtkindergartners would liketo know. She assignedgroups to read to find theanswers to the questionsand then to write an infor-mational text for thekindergarten library.

    Students were tested ontheir ability to follow aprocedure. Teachers readto students or studentsread a prepared procedure.Students were evaluatedon their ability to followthe directions.

    The teacher told the classto imagine that an alienlands in the playground andsees a pine tree there. Thisalien asks one of the stu-dents what the tree is. Theassignment was to write aninformation book abouttrees for the alien.

    The teacher told the classthat each student was topretend to have a pen pal inanother country. The stu-dents wrote an informationbook about the plants thatgrow in their backyards toinform pen pals who havenever been to the UnitedStates.

    Students answered ques-tions referring to sampleprocedures such as these:How many materials are re-quired? What are you sup-posed to do after you havepoured the water into theglass?

    In pairs, students re-searched a topic that theybelieved would be of inter-est to children in Mrs. Xsclass. Mrs. Xs class gener-ated questions and sentthem to the students toguide them. The studentsultimate purpose was towrite and publish informa-tion books on each topicand present them to Mrs. Xfor her class library.

    The kindergarten classrequested picture booksabout animal babies. Ingroups of three, studentscreated the books. Theyeither drew or used cut-outpictures, and they wroteaccompanying labels,captions, or sentences.They laminated each pageand bound the books, whichwere presented to thekindergarten class andread aloud by the studentswho created them.

    Students contributed textto an informationalbrochure to be printed andleft for visitors to a localnature center. This projectwas prompted by the guideat the center after the stu-dents had visited there. Hewrote a letter to the classrequesting the brochure.

    Students were given a pro-cedural text about a con-cept related to force andmotion. They were asked toread and follow the proce-dures individually. The classthen reconvened to discussthe concept, or point, ofthe demonstration.

    (continued)

  • The Reading Teacher Vol. 60, No. 4 December 2006/January 2007350

    TABLE 1Examples of activities with differing levels of authenticity of purpose (continued)

    Activites and text type Rating 3 Rating 2 Rating 1

    Writing activities, procedural text

    In a lesson on force and mo-tion, the culminating activi-ty was a demonstrationprocedure. Each studentpair was given the proce-dural handout and told tofollow it. The point was toget the procedure to comeout right and to enjoy ahands-on activity at the endof a lesson. As students fin-ished, there was a lot oflaughter, pats on the back,cleaning up, and a sense ofending the day or week. Butthere was no more sci-ence talk around the con-cept of force and motion.

    Following a lesson onplanting seeds, the teacherassigned students to writea procedure for doing so.They were to use all thatthey had learned aboutplanting seeds. They tookturns following one anoth-ers procedures to see howwell they were written.Many had to do rewrites.

    After a unit on underwaterplants, students were as-signed to create a procedur-al pamphlet telling readershow to prepare and care foran underwater plant aquari-um. They worked with theteacher to compose it, andthe teacher saved the fin-ished products for nextyears students.

    Students read through pro-cedures for demonstratingthat fire will not burn in theabsence of oxygen. Theywere told not to try thisthemselves.

    Students were told to pre-tend that an alien arrivedat their school and wantedto know how to take care ofbaby chickens. The teacherassigned students to workin groups of three and pre-pare a how-to pamphletfor the alien. The teacherled these groups in com-posing this procedural text.She wrote it on chart paperor on the chalkboard.

    Students watched and an-swered questions while theteacher wrote parts of a pro-cedure on the chalkboard ina lesson on writing proce-dures. Teacher questionswere of this type: Now, whatdo I call the section that liststhe things you need?Materials, thats right. Illwrite that right here.

    As part of a unit on insects,students decided to buildand stock their own antfarm. They found instruc-tions on the Internet anddivided into groups to builda farm and to stock it.

    The teacher read from aprocedural text anddemonstrated procedureswhile the whole class lis-tened and watched. The fo-cus afterward was on thescience concept demon-strated or tested.

    Students were assigneddifferent tasks related togrowing corn inside theirclassroom. As spring breakapproached, they com-posedin their task-relatedgroupsa list of instruc-tions for the aide who hadvolunteered to take care ofthe plants while the stu-dents were away.

    Students created a proce-dures book that will bepassed on to the class nextyear. They worked in pairsto create procedures fordemonstrations for key sci-ence concepts. Each pairpicked a different one froma list generated by theteacher. As part of this, theyhad to field test theirdemonstration by doing itaccording to their writtenprocedures. The teacher ful-ly expected the students touse the procedures to helplearn the concepts.

    The teacher led the class incomposing a procedural text.She elicited text from thestudents and wrote it on theboard. The students thencopied the text to be includedin their individual proceduresbook that they will eventuallytake home and use.

  • the need to seek information that the student read-ers required or wanted to know. Teachers oftengenerated student questions prior to the reading ofinformational text. These types of set-ups fell intoseveral categories.

    Hands-on demonstrations. Teachers conducteddemonstrations to generate questions as well as gen-eral interest in a science topic the class was about tostudy. For example, one teacher created a model vol-cano and, by pouring a solution of baking soda andvinegar into the top, caused a reaction that lookedlike a lava eruption. Another teacher brought incaterpillars for the students to observe and handle.Questions that arose naturally or in response to theteachers elicitation were used to inspire and guideinformational reading. Teachers recorded questionson a clipboard as they circulated, and wrote themon chart paper during a group discussion. This inte-gration of hands-on, or first-hand, investigationswith text-based, or second-hand, investigations issupported by a number of research studies (e.g.,Anderson & Guthrie, 1999; Palincsar & Magnusson,2001; Romance & Vitale, 2001).

    Teachable moments. Teachers responded to un-expected events in ways that connected with theirscience instruction. For example, a second graderappeared in class one day with her arm in a cast.Her teacher, realizing that she could use this un-fortunate accident for her unit on the skeletal sys-tem, centered the class discussion on the studentsbroken arm. Questions like How did you breakit? Does it hurt? Which bone is broken? wereasked. Students read many informational texts onbones that day. Another teacher proceeded in a sim-ilar manner when a student brought in an unusualand interesting rock, in response to a unit on rocks.

    Topic announcements. KWLs (Ogle, 1986)were often used by teachers for eliciting questionsabout topics. These activities followed the KWLtemplate for the most part (K = what we know; W =what do we want to know; L = what we havelearned). The teachers first elicited what the stu-dents knewfor example, about sound. Then theyelicited questions the students had about the top-icwhat they wanted to knowstructuring theirreading of informational text about sound. In a sim-ilar approach, teachers announced a new science

    topic, read aloud from a text about it, and thenasked students if they had any questions on thattopic. These questions guided future reading.

    Discrepant events. Finally, teachers set up situa-tions involving discrepant events to generate ques-tions about science content. A discrepant eventreflects a reality that conflicts with what studentsmight expect to see. For a study unit on light, oneteacher set up a prism on the overhead while herclass was out of the room. This caused rainbowsto appear on the ceiling. When the students re-turned there were many oohs and ahs and arush of questions about how the rainbow effects oc-curred. Capturing these questions, the teacher ledthe class in finding informational text on light tohelp them understand the phenomenon.

    Authentic reading and writing ofprocedural texts in science

    Given our operational definition of authenticreading and writing of procedural textsreading inorder to do a procedure and writing to instructsomeone how to do onethe set-ups for these au-thentic literacy activities were fairly straightfor-ward. Highly authentic reading of procedural textoccurred when teachers let students in their scienceunits read and conduct procedures that were an in-tegral part of the content being learned (e.g., in-vestigations intended to demonstrate scienceconcepts). For the most part, students wrote proce-dural text for the authentic purpose of providing therequisite instruction to someone who would bereading the text when conducting the procedures.These could be procedures for conducting investi-gations, caring for plants and animals in or outsidethe classroom, and so on.

    Authentic writing and readingAll of the teachers gave evidence of conceiving

    authenticity as a literacy constructthat is, as in-cluding writing, reading, and other languageprocesses much of the time. This meant that teach-ers often used the communicative purposes of writ-ing informational and procedural text as a rationalefor reading. Although we can look at these data onintegrated reading and writing activities in severalways, we use three lenses: literacy in response to

    Authentic literacy activities for developing comprehension and writing 351

  • community need, literacy as part of problem solv-ing, and audience as integral to authentic writing.

    Literacy in response to community need. Ouropening vignette is an example of this sort of set-up.Over the course of two years, several teachersarranged ways to involve their students in authenticreading and writing in response to community needs.

    The teacher in our opening vignette, Ms. Jones,arranged this activity by asking the director of in-formation at the nature center to write the letter toher class requesting the brochure. She posted anenlarged copy of the letter in the room for studentsto consult as they worked in groups to answer ques-tions of What kinds of things would other visitorswant to know about? The students were writing atext type that exists in the world outside of school (abrochure) to a real and appropriate audience for thepurpose of providing information to their readersquestionsall prerequisites of authentic informa-tional writing. And it is worth noting that, althoughthe teacher initiated the request for the brochure, thefinal text was published and made available to visi-tors to the pond at the nature center.

    In another school, a teacher arranged for theprincipal to visit the class and ask students to takeresponsibility for the school garden that year. Thistask would serve as the culminating activity for theclasss study unit on plants and would involvereading about different flowers and vegetables andhow to grow them (including soil, water, and lightrequirements). The students wrote informationaltext for the seed packets typically posted in gar-dens at the ends of rows and wrote procedural textsfor other school and community members whowould be responsible for caring for the growingplants over the summer.

    Literacy as part of problem solving. A numberof the teachers presented their students with real-lifeproblems that required science knowledge to solve.The teachers wove authentic purposes for readingand writing into these problem-solving activities. Atvarious times, students were faced with such prob-lems as dying tadpoles and wilting plants, setting upclass aquariums, helping their teachers father movefrom one home to another, and arranging for the re-moval of a large file cabinet that appeared inexpli-cably in the middle of their classroom one morning.

    This last activity was the brainstorm of one ofthe second-grade teachers in our project. Her stu-dents were studying simple machines, and it oc-curred to her that an authentic purpose for learningabout simple machines was to actually have tomove an object from one place to another. Shearranged with the custodian to deposit a large,heavy file cabinet in the middle of her classroomafter school hours. When the students arrived thenext morning, they and she were nonplussed: Howdid that object get there? And how to get it out?

    She called the principal from the classroom asthe class looked on and listened. The principal sentthe custodian to the room and he explained that thedelivery was a mistake but that he did not have timeto move the cabinet. The teacher then convincedthe class to take on the removal of the cabinet as aproject for which they could use what they werelearning about simple machines (levers, pulleys,etc.). Students worked in groups to read about waysthat simple machines could help. They then wroteup their ideas and tried them out. As a culminatingevent, they wrote procedural texts for those whofound themselves in a similar predicament andplaced these texts in their classroom library underthe topic of science.

    Audience as integral to authentic writing.Audience is generally agreed to be a critical aspectof writing process and product. The construct of au-dience played a major role in our conceptualizationof authentic writing as we thought about authentic-ity in the light of real-life writing practices. Outsidean instructional context, literate people almost al-ways write only if there is a reader for their writ-ing, even if (in the case of journal or personal memowriting) the reader is the writer. One challenge forthe teachers in our study (and, we suspect, for teach-ers in general) was the establishment of real audi-encesor real readersfor the students writing.By real here, we mean a reader who will read thewritten text for its communicative purpose and notsolely for evaluation, as so often happens to writ-ing done in instructional contexts. The teachers roseto this challenge in admirable and inventive ways.

    Teachers established real audiences and read-ers at different distances from their student writ-ers. Many texts were written to be read by readersoutside the school setting, such as the brochurewritten for visitors at the nature center. Others were

    The Reading Teacher Vol. 60, No. 4 December 2006/January 2007352

  • directed toward readers within the school but out-side the students classrooms. And many werecomposed for classmates, resulting in texts that re-flected shared background knowledge.

    Purposes for writing to a more distant reader.Many teachers in the study proved to be inventivein establishing purposes for writing informationaland procedural scientific texts for real readers out-side their schools and, in some cases, outside theircommunities and countries. They called on person-al and professional friends to act as readers and au-diences. They took advantage of e-mail, theInternet, and other technological venues. And theyworked with local community members to estab-lish authentic contexts for authentic writing, as ourexample of the pond brochure illustrates.

    One Michigan teacher arranged for a friendwho teaches third grade in Costa Rica to requestvia e-mail some information books on Michigansclimate for her students. While reading and writ-ing in response to this request, the Michigan stu-dents also learned about the climate of Costa Ricaso they could better explain their weather throughcompare-and-contrast techniques. Other distant,authentic, teacher-arranged audiences included stu-dents who requested information on living things,light, and sound; visitors to the local library whoselibrarian requested information books on coralreefs; museum-goers whose director requested in-formation sheets about light; and readers of theZOOM website (http://pbskids.org/zoom/), whichsolicited science-related procedures from children.

    Arranging within-school audiences. As teacherssearched for authentic audiences for their studentwriters, they also found them within their schoolcommunities. These readers provided the distancethat is pragmatically required for much writing butwere more immediately accessible than those out-side school. Students wrote information books on avariety of science topics for their school libraries,for next years class, for the kindergartners(who were often willing listeners), and for numer-ous other classes in their schools. For each of thesewriting events, which always required backgroundreading, the teachers made sure that the studentsknew there was a real audience and that the textswould be read by that audience.

    Informational texts other than books were alsowritten for authentic audiences within school com-munities, always in response to a demonstratedneed or request for such texts. Answers providinginformation about science topics were written as aresult of a question jar placed in school libraries.Students were encouraged to write questions to putin the jar. Bookmarks with information on di-nosaurs were written for students and made avail-able in a central place. Posters like those found innatural history museums were placed in schoolhallways. Factoids on weather were written to beread over the public address system for the dailyweather report. Video scripts about water werewritten and then produced for the morning an-nouncement event in a school that featured televi-sion monitors in each classroom.

    Authentic writing for within-school audiencesalso took place with procedural text. For example,teachers arranged with colleagues to request proce-dures for experiments that their classes could con-duct. Or one class would serve as an audience foranother in reading student-written text on how togrow lima beans.

    Classroom community as audience. Finally, teach-ers would often turn to their own classrooms to pro-vide purposes and audiences for the informationaland procedural reading and writing. All of these ac-tivities, rated 3, could and do occur naturally in theworld outside the learning-to-read-and-write con-text. For example, sometimes students would readabout mammals with the purpose of sharing orallywith class members interesting facts they discov-ered. Or students would write informational bookson a variety of science topics for their class library,to be read by class members during the year.

    Because procedural texts specific to the class-rooms science topics and curricula and appropriatefor students of this age were hard to find, the ration-ale for writing procedures to demonstrate conceptsunder study was very natural and obvious. In thesecases, students would often write different proce-dures in groups and then share them with classmatesin other groups who would then conduct the proce-dures. One interesting example of this was the classthat wrote procedures for creating different musicalinstruments (as part of a study of sound) and then ex-changed them with other students who tried to buildthe instruments and play them.

    Authentic literacy activities for developing comprehension and writing 353

  • A final example of writing for classmates is theproduction of informational posters on differentscience topics that were posted around the room forstudy and perusal. The actual reading of theseposters took different formsfrom special eventsakin to science fairs to more casual reading whenopportunities arose, much like environmental printfor the room. They were all written, however, toprovide information for a reader who wanted orneeded it, not simply as displays of products.

    Learning to read and write whilereading and writing

    We offer these ideas and strategies, gleanedfrom teachers, for bringing authentic reading andwriting into the classroom in the spirit of collabo-ration. As teachers struggle to make learning andlearning to read and write meaningful and authen-tic, we believe it helps to share ideas and experi-ences. We also believe that although the strategiesin this report came from second- and third-gradescience teachers, they are generally applicable todifferent content and in higher grades. For exam-ple, taking advantage of current events, either in the

    lives of the students or in the life of the community,to engender authentic reading for information is anatural activity for a social studies class. Authenticwriting of historical text for real readers can also beincorporated into studies of history.

    Furthermore, we encourage teachers to thinkbeyond the specific genres we used for our study.The two dimensions of authentic literacy activitiesdiscussedtext type and purposecan be appliedto many different genres that occur in the daily livesof literate people. Some examples of such genres,along with various real-life purposes for readingand writing them, are included below in Table 2.

    Many teachers attested to the power of authen-tic literacy activities. They reported that studentscame alive when they realized they were writingto real people for real reasons or reading real-lifetexts for their own purposes. Beyond this, the re-sults of our research provide teachers with evi-dence that more authentic literacy activities arerelated to greater growth in the ability to read andwrite new genres (Purcell-Gates & Duke, 2004).With this additional motivation to involve studentsin authentic literacy activities, we believe that thestrategies and scenarios offered here will be par-ticularly helpful as teachers attempt to create

    The Reading Teacher Vol. 60, No. 4 December 2006/January 2007354

    TABLE 2Sample genres and purposes for reading and writing them

    Genre Purpose for reading Purpose for writing

    Informational text To obtain information about the To provide information about the natural or social world natural or social world to someone

    who wants or needs it

    Procedural text To make something or do To guide the making or doing of something according to something for someone who wants orprocedures needs it

    Fictional narrative text To relax; for entertainment, To provide relaxation; to entertain,broadly defined; to discuss broadly defined; to foster discussion

    Personal letter To maintain a relationship; to To maintain a relationship; to informlearn about personal events; to about personal events; to expressshare emotions emotions

    List To be informed about a related To record a related group of itemsgroup of items

    Biography To learn about a persons life To convey information about a persons life

    Book review To learn about a book and To convey information about a book andsomeones opinion of and ones opinion of and responses to itresponses to it

  • opportunities to bring authentic literacy into theirclassrooms.

    Note: This article is based upon work support-ed by the National Science Foundation under GrantNo. 9979904.

    Duke teaches at Michigan State University(350 Floor Erickson Hall, East Lansing, MI48824, USA). E-mail [email protected] teaches at the University ofBritish Columbia in Vancouver. Hall teaches atthe University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.Tower teaches at Prairie Creek CommunitySchool in Northfield, Minnesota.

    ReferencesAnderson, E., & Guthrie, J.T. (1999, April). Motivating chil-

    dren to gain conceptual knowledge from text: The com-bination of science observation and interesting texts.Paper presented at the annual meeting of the AmericanEducational Research Association, Montreal, QC.

    Brown, J.S., Collins, A., & Duguid, P. (1989). Situated cogni-tion and the culture of learning. Educational Researcher,18, 3242.

    Delpit, L.D. (1992). Acquisition of literate discourse: Bowingbefore the master? Theory Into Practice, 31, 296302.

    Gee, J.P. (1992). The social mind. Westport, CT: Bergin &Garvey.

    Guthrie, J.T., Wigfield, A., & Perencevich, K.C. (2004).Motivating reading comprehension: Concept-OrientedReading Instruction. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

    Hiebert, E.H. (1994). Becoming literate through authentictasks: Evidence and adaptations. In R.B. Ruddell, M.R.Ruddell, & H. Singer (Eds.), Theoretical models andprocesses of reading (4th ed., pp. 391413). Newark, DE:International Reading Association.

    Hymes, D. (1974). Foundations in sociolinguistics: An ethno-graphic approach. Philadelphia: University ofPennsylvania Press.

    Lemke, J.L. (1994, November). Genre as a strategic re-source. Paper presented at the annual meeting of theNational Council of Teachers of English, Orlando, FL.

    New London Group. (1996). A pedagogy of multiliteracies:Designing social futures. Harvard Educational Review,66, 6092.

    Ogle, D.S. (1986). KWL group instructional strategy. In A.S.Palincsar, D.S. Ogle, B.F. Jones, & E.G. Carr (Eds.),Teaching reading as thinking (pp. 1117). Alexandria, VA:Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

    Palincsar, A., & Magnusson, S. (2001). The interplay of first-hand and text-based investigations to model and supportthe development of scientific knowledge and reasoning.In S. Carver & D. Klahr (Eds.), Cognition and instruction:Twenty-five years of progress (pp. 151193). Mahwah, NJ:Erlbaum.

    Purcell-Gates, V., Degener, S.C., Jacobson, E., & Soler, M.(2002). Impact of authentic adult literacy instruction onadult literacy practices. Reading Research Quarterly, 37,7092.

    Purcell-Gates, V., & Duke, N.K. (2004). Learning to readand write genre-specific text: The roles of authentic ex-perience and explicit teaching. Unpublished manuscript,University of British Columbia, Vancouver.

    Purcell-Gates, V., Duke, N.K., & Martineau, J.A. (2007).Learning to read and write genre-specific text: Roles ofauthenitic experience and explicit teaching. ReadingResearch Quarterly, 42(1).

    Reid, I. (Ed.). (1987). The place of genre in learning: Currentdebates. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Deakin University,Centre for Studies in Literary Education.

    Romance, N.R., & Vitale, M.R. (2001). Implementing an in-depth expanded science model in elementary schools:Multi-year findings, research issues, and policy implica-tions. International Journal of Science Education, 23,373404.

    Authentic literacy activities for developing comprehension and writing 355