Abstract

Research suggests that developing deep understanding of text requires sustained emphasis on reading comprehension instruction and scaffolded strategy practices. However, although research has shown explicit teaching of reading comprehension strategies to be effective, we know little about whether strategy instruction and use are part of “daily life” in classrooms (Pearson, & Cervetti, 2017). The present study analyses 60 video recorded English as a second language (L2) lessons in seven lower secondary schools in Norway, across two school years (9th and 10th grade) based on The Protocol for Language Arts Teaching Observation. The article investigates the types of text-based reading comprehension instruction and strategy use that goes on in these classrooms. Key findings show that teachers engage their students in reading comprehension instruction of narrative and expository texts more than half the time, offering guided strategy practice based on student needs, and encouraging daily use of known reading comprehension strategies, instead of explicitly teaching new ones. These are powerful examples of successful reading comprehension instruction, and show that when English teachers prioritise reading comprehension instruction, they use authentic L2 texts to develop and scaffold critical literacy and metadiscursive awareness.

Highlights

  • Reading comprehension, a hallmark of effective and sophisticated reading instruction, is key to active participation in today’s changing global society (Israeli, 2017; UNESCO, 2004; World Bank, 2013)

  • They align with most essential elements of reading comprehension instruction proposed by Duke et al (2011)

  • When prioritising reading instruction, teachers combined surface-level and deeper-level tasks, scaffolded comprehension by offering explicit strategy instruction based on student needs, and encouraged daily use of known strategies, instead of teaching new ones

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Summary

Introduction

A hallmark of effective and sophisticated reading instruction, is key to active participation in today’s changing global society (Israeli, 2017; UNESCO, 2004; World Bank, 2013). Understanding various instructional pathways in classrooms is key to understanding how students develop as strategic readers, attending to how the teaching of strategies fits naturally with other components of reading comprehension instruction (Brown, 2017; Israeli, 2017). While most reading research focuses on younger readers or college students, less is known about comprehension strategies that students in secondary school employ to empower them to construct meaning from complex texts (Brown, 2017). This article is a contribution to redressing this situation by following secondary students over two school years (grades 9–10)

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