Stories The Knowledge Loom Home Page About Search Feedback Site Map Partners
The Knowledge Loom - Adolescent Literacy in the Content AreasSpotlight cover page

Spotlight Cover

List of Practices

About This Practice

List of Stories

success story
Current page

Short Summary

Feature Story

Background Context

Design & Implementation

Results

Replication Details

Contact Information

Rating Criteria

Join the dialog submenus

Panel Discussion

Have Your Say

Q & A

Download/Print

Entire Spotlight

This Practice

This Story

Selections


About Printing

Log in
Register



Christine Cziko's Freshman English Class, Thurgood Marshall High School

San Francisco, CA


School Type: Public
School Setting: Urban
Level: High
School Design: Traditional
Content Presented By:
Center for Resource Management (CRM) content provider logo
The Education Alliance at Brown University content provider logo

Summary

The practice: Creating Responsive Classrooms

  • Urban school with emphasis on college preparation
  • 40% of students with GPAs of 2.0 or below at start of program
  • High failure rate attributable to low reading comprehension levels in content areas
  • 10-unit, yearlong course for all incoming freshmen that looked for ways to make it "cool" to unlock difficult text
  • Reading modeling/apprenticeship where comprehension is something that can be learned -- not a mystery that you "get" or "don't get"
  • Sustained Silent Reading that asked students to record what they learned about themselves as readers

At the Thurgood Marshall School, the Academic Literacy course began as a 10-unit, year-long course for all freshmen in Fall 1996. At that time, many students were failing, and reading comprehension was considered part of the problem. Offered through the Strategic Literacy Initiative, a research and professional development effort based in San Francisco, the course builds students' awareness of reading purposes and processes. They are prompted to think about their own relationships to reading, reflecting on questions such as "What strategies do I use as I read?" They make use of Silent Sustained Reading and are asked to reflect on discoveries about themselves as readers. After seven months of instruction students at Thurgood Marshall on average increased their reading comprehension by two grade levels.



This site also exemplifies the following practice(s):

  • Making Connections to Students' Lives  see details
  • Having Students Interact with Each Other and with Text  see details
  • Roles of the Teacher  see details
  • Reading and Writing  see details
  • Speaking and Listening  see details
  • An Emphasis on Thinking  see details
  • Creating a Student-Centered Classroom  see details
  • Vocabulary Development  see details
  • Understanding Text Structures  see details
  • Recognizing and Analyzing Discourse Features  see details
  • Supporting the English classroom through literacy development   see details
  • Supporting the social studies classroom through literacy development   see details


  [Top]   [Next]