The professional literature abounds with discussions of the need to integrate reading skills with content area instruction (Blanton, Wood, & Taylor, 2007; Gavelek, Raphael, Biondo, & Wang, 2000; Moje, 2007; Jordan, Jensen, & Greenleaf, 2001; Wood & Blanton, 2009s; Wood & Muth, 1991). To this end, national organizations (International Reading Association and National Middle School Association, 2001; National School Board Association, 2006), state curriculum standards (Bacevich & Salinger, 2006) and national reports (Hubbard, Mehan & Stein, 2006; Heller G Kirsch, Braun, Sum, & Yamamoto, 2007) advocate the value of integrated instruction as a necessary means of learning required subject area knowledge and concepts. Actually enacting this integrative process is yet another matter. Consider the dialogue in the two different classroom scenarios illustrated in Figure 1. In Classroom A, the teacher tells the class in advance the meaning of the unknown word by citing a dictionary definition. Then, after the students have read the paragraph silently, the teacher asks the students a series of literal level, text-based questions about the passage content. To conclude the lesson, the teacher recites what the students should now know about the information in the passage. The teacher in this scenario attempts to teach the content of the lesson without helping students understand the language of the passage and how to read and fully understand the meaning of the passage. At no time are students asked to refer back to the passage for confirmation, and the entire lesson is dominated by teacher talk. In Classroom B, the teacher has already pre-assigned the students to groups and tells them to use imagery to visualize the environment and farm life reflected in the paragraph. With their minds actively engaged in the text, the teacher uses a line of questioning and probing to help them understand the meaning of the target word, subsistence, continually referring them back to the paragraph to find support for their answers. For closure, the students work in groups to review the content learned in the lesson. Expanding the vocabulary portion of the lesson further, the teacher asks group members to think of or locate more words with similar word parts. This scenario illustrates a combination of teacher and student contributions using both small-group and whole-class formats. In other words, the teacher is teaching both the content of the lesson and how to read that content. We maintain that developing an awareness of the skills and tasks involved in proficient reading is necessary in the middle grades and that success with these skills and tasks develops through peer interaction and meaningful activity, not through teacher-dominated discussion. To that end, in this column we introduce the integrated literacy circle (Blanton, Pilonieta & Wood, 2007), a discussion-based approach to teaching and learning content area concepts while simultaneously acquiring basic reading skills. We illustrate how a teacher facilitates this approach using excerpts from transcripts of two lessons that were taught in middle school classrooms. The first lesson was designed to help students identify cause and effect in a social studies passage, and the second lesson taught students to recognize and use context clues to identify obstacle words in a science lesson. However, note that integrated literacy circles can be used to teach and reinforce students' understanding of any of the necessary literacy skills and tasks including predicting, sequencing, summarizing, skimming for main ideas, inferring, critical analysis, and text structure. Defining the integrated literacy circle concept An integrated literacy circle is a way for students to learn, apply, organize, and coordinate the skills and strategies needed for proficient reading. This concept is very similar to the reading circles prevalent in many elementary classrooms, where students are assigned to groups for a particular instructional purpose. …