Reflection 1
Reflection 1
Reflection 1
Reflection 1
Shelby Hemley
instruction, as opposed to content-area literacy, which is strategies for literacy that can be used
throughout any content area like math, science, or history. This type of teaching “literacy focuses
on discrete ways reading and writing are used in the specific discipline being studied.” (Chauvin
et al 2015). For example, in an English class, students might learn how to dissect a poem using
the analysis of literary devices such as metaphors and rhyme schemes. According to “Reading in
the Disciplines”, “They need tools to understand such worlds, to be able to map salient features
of these unfamiliar environments to their own prototypical dilemmas as human beings.” (Lee et
al 2010). This approach to reading is very different from how a science teacher would instruct
students on how to write a lab report, how a math teacher would give students lessons on how to
interpret word problems, or how a history teacher might have students analyze political cartoons.
Each of these content areas have different skills necessary to be successful in that discipline,
which content-area literacy does not involve. Another important discipline for learning in the 21st
century is digital literacy: “In light of these rapid, constant advancements that require us to adapt
our existing skills or adopt new communicative skills, literacy as the ability to read and write
traditional, print-based texts needs to be redefined… The ways adolescents use digital tools (e.g.,
smartphones, computers) are examples of how more multimodal, out-of-school literacies differ
from the more dominant, academic literacies that students use in school” (Lewis). This means
that teachers need to adapt to the new technologies that students are using and incorporate them
into the classroom so that students can be more engaged and practice their literacies in different
ways. These distinctions in literacy matter because the times are changing, and literacy is no
longer defined as simply knowing how to read and write. To be successful in and out of the
classroom, students need to understand the distinctions between literacies in technology and in
3
Running Head: Reflection 1
various content areas. Throughout their lives, students will have an increasingly difficult time
finding jobs and succeeding in higher education without being able to differentiate between
these. By doing this now, teachers are giving students a greater advantage “and prepares them
for the global world beyond the classroom” (Definition of Literacy in a Digital Age 2019). As of
2020, students are already facing a disconnect between what they are learning in school and what
they are doing at home and out in the world, so it is crucial for teachers to bridge this gap. To do
so, they can start by incorporating technology into the classroom to “achieve deeper and more
authentic contexts. … As learners utilize and enculturate in current and future digital contexts,
they need opportunities to promote, amplify, and encourage differing forms of language”
(Definition of Literacy in a Digital Age 2019). Eventually, the use of disciplinary literacy will
allow students to learn like the experts of that content and will have an advantage over others
References
Chauvin, R., & Theodore, K. (2015, Spring). Teaching Content-Area Literacy and Disciplinary
Lee, C., & Spratley, A. (2010). Reading in the Disciplines: Challenges of Adolescent Literacy.
carnegie.s3.amazonaws.com/filer_public/88/05/880559fd-afb1-49ad-af0e-
e10c8a94d366/ccny_report_2010_tta_lee.pdf
success/chapter/10-twenty-first-century-perspectives-on-adolescent-literacy-and-
instruction/
Unknown. Definition of Literacy in a Digital Age. (2019, November 7). Retrieved from
https://ncte.org/statement/nctes-definition-literacy-digital-age/