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REVISITING THE CASE FOR NARROW READING WITH ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS Annual Conference of the Literacy Research Association - Dallas, Texas December 4,

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Presentation on theme: "REVISITING THE CASE FOR NARROW READING WITH ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS Annual Conference of the Literacy Research Association - Dallas, Texas December 4,"— Presentation transcript:

1 REVISITING THE CASE FOR NARROW READING WITH ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS Annual Conference of the Literacy Research Association - Dallas, Texas December 4, 2013 Laurie E. Hansen California State University Fullerton & University of California Irvine

2 BACKGROUND 4.7 million ELL in K-12 U.S. public schools (Aud, et al., 2012) Long Term English Learners (LTEL) (Olsen, 2010) Reading comprehension trajectories (Chall & Jacobs, 2003; Hemphill & Vanneman, 2011; Kieffer, 2008)

3 WHAT IS NARROW READING? Reading books written by the same author, on the same topic, or from the same genre (Hadaway & Young, 2010; Krashen, 1981)

4 NARROW READING (KRASHEN, 1981) Vocabulary Background knowledge Authors’ writing styles Story structures

5 RELEVANT LITERATURE Independent reading volume & reading achievement (Anderson, Wilson, & Fielding, 1988; Heyns, 1978; National Center for Education Statistics, 2011; National Reading Panel, 2000) Access to books (Constantino, 2005; Duke, 2000; Neuman & Celano, 2001) Summer reading interventions (Allington et al., 2010; Kim, 2006; 2007; Kim & White, 2008)

6 RESEARCH ON NARROW READING Analyses of text collections (Gardner, 2004; Kyongho & Nation,1989; Schmitt & Carter, 2000) Narrow reading interventions (Cho & Krashen, 1994; Cho, Ahn, & Krashen, 2005; Min, 2008)

7 PARTICIPANTS & SETTING Five elementary schools (three Title I) 14 classrooms 220 fourth grade children ELL group (n = 113) included current and former ELLs non-ELL (n = 107)

8 RESEARCH QUESTIONS 1.Did the ELL children have adequate access to books at home and in their classroom and school libraries? 2.Did ELL and non-ELL children engage in similar independent reading volume? 3.Did narrow reading volume relate to growth in vocabulary knowledge and comprehension for ELL and non-ELL children?

9 DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS BY SCHOOL School%Poverty%ELL%White%Latino%Asian%Black%Other Jacinto90%69%6%89%2.5%2%.5% Manzanita54%32%14%71%9%1%5% Azalea51%29% 58%8%4%1% Hydrangea12%5%58%18%19%2%3% Carnation5%3%56%26%10%2%6%

10 PROCEDURES Fall vocabulary & literacy measures Children from six classrooms – encouraged to read narrowly Children from eight classrooms – encouraged to read a lot Reading volume tracked Oct-March Spring vocabulary & literacy measures

11 READING MANAGEMENT PROGRAM DATA Number of quizzes taken Percentage correct on quizzes Book difficulty level Number of points earned

12 NARROW READING VOLUME List of quizzes taken = book list Children’s book lists coded by author and topic Narrow book = more than one nonfiction book on the same topic; more than one fiction book by the same author Proportion narrow = #narrow books/total books

13 VOCABULARY & LITERACY MEASURES Receptive vocabulary (PPVT-4) Expressive vocabulary (EVT-2) Word reading (WRAT-3) Decoding (W-J Word Attack) Comprehension (W-J Passage Comprehension)

14 ACCESS TO BOOKS Self-report books at home Classroom libraries School libraries

15 RESULTS ELL children’s access to books ELL and non-ELL children’s independent reading volume Relationship between narrow reading & vocabulary and literacy

16 ACCESS TO BOOKS IN THE CLASSROOM LIBRARIES SchoolTeacherTotal booksStudentsBooks per student Azalea5109313.5 Azalea6278367.7 Hydrangea13292368.1 Manzanita4306339.2 Manzanita33653510.4 Manzanita24033511.5 Azalea85003514.2 Jacinto95053315.3 Carnation125633118.2 Manzanita15813516.6 Carnation116213219.4 Jacinto106553121.1 Azalea77163619.9 Hydrangea149903627.5 M 4923414.5 SD (223)(2)(6.5)

17 BOOKS IN THE SCHOOL LIBRARIES SchoolTotal Books#StudentsBooks per Student Jacinto8,99450217.9 Carnation10,84773214.8 Azalea11,86454721.7 Hydrangea12,46356921.9 Manzanita13,74574518.5 M12,183.9619.019.0 SD(1,683.6)(111.8)(3.0)

18 ACCESS BOOKS AT HOME Native English-speaking = 91.7 ** Current ELLs = 39.8 ** Former ELLs = 54.5 ** p <.01

19 READING MANAGEMENT PROGRAM VARIABLES Non-ELLCurrent ELLFormer ELL Quizzes takenM49.150.150.0 SD(38.4)(31.3)(34.9) Avg % correctM80.468.8***78.6 SD(19.4)(14.6)(14.5) Avg book levelM4.4***3.4***4.1 SD(1.1)(0.8)(0.7) Points earnedM57.4**14.2**48.1 SD(93.1)(9.8)(88.4)

20 INDEPENDENT READING VOLUME Non-ELLCurrent ELLFormer ELL #Books 34 (38) 39 (34) 47 (35) #Pages 1,880 (2,600) 1,140 a (924) 2,166 a (2,652) #Words 307,301** (537,584) 77,581** (100,007) 277,016 (558,025) Proportion Narrow.39 (.34).34 (.29).43 (.34)

21 GROWTH IN VOCABULARY & LITERACY Proportion of narrow reading was related to growth in receptive vocabulary, all language groups Children showed growth on all measures No other effects significant

22 DISCUSSION: ACCESS TO BOOKS School libraries 3 schools below 20 books/child Classroom libraries 1 classroom below 7 books/child Books at home current ELLs (40), former ELLs (55), non-ELLs (92)

23 DISCUSSION: READING VOLUME Number of books read vs. words or pages read Current ELLs exposed to fewer words than non-ELLs Current ELLS had weaker book comprehension than former- and non-ELLs

24 LIMITATIONS Correlational study Estimated book reading variables ELL book access in one community

25 IMPLICATIONS FOR TEACHING All children need access to books Teachers can support ELL children in choosing books Teachers can support ELL children in doing more independent reading Teachers can encourage ELL children to read narrowly

26 IMPLICATIONS FOR RESEARCH Narrow reading invention using experimental design Analyze children’s books repeated vocabulary, story structures Longitudinal study to see if narrow reading impacts comprehension

27 CONCLUSION Tentative evidence in support of narrow reading for acquisition of receptive vocabulary knowledge

28 THANK YOU! University of California Irvine hansenl@uci.edu California State University Fullerton lahansen@fullerton.edu


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