540 Pages
    by Routledge

    540 Pages
    by Routledge

    In a time of pressures, challenges, and threats to public education, teacher preparation, and funding for educational research, the fifth volume of the Handbook of Reading Research takes a hard look at why we undertake reading research, how school structures, contexts and policies shape students’ learning, and, most importantly, how we can realize greater impact from the research conducted. A comprehensive volume, with a "gaps and game changers" frame, this handbook not only synthesizes current reading research literature, but also informs promising directions for research, pushing readers to address problems and challenges in research design or method.

    Bringing the field authoritatively and comprehensively up-to-date since the publication of the Handbook of Reading Research, Volume IV, this volume presents multiple perspectives that will facilitate new research development, tackling topics including:

    • Diverse student populations and sociocultural perspectives on reading development
    • Digital innovation, literacies, and platforms
    • Conceptions of teachers, reading, readers, and texts, and the role of affect, cognition, and social-emotional learning in the reading process
    • New methods for researching reading instruction, with attention to equity, inclusion, and education policies
    • Language development and reading comprehension
    • Instructional practices to promote reading development and comprehension for diverse groups of readers

    Each volume of this handbook has come to define the field for the period of time it covers, and this volume is no exception, providing a definitive compilation of current reading research. This is a must-have resource for all students, teachers, reading specialists, and researchers focused on and interested in reading and literacy research, and improving both instruction and programs to cultivate strong readers and teachers.

    Part One: Game Changers in Reading Research: Setting the Stage

    Chapter 1: Game Changers in Reading Research

    Part Two: How Increasingly Diversified Populations Change the Game for Readers, Teachers, Leaders, and Reading Researchers

    Chapter 2: Demographic Realities and Methodological Flexibility in Literacy Teaching and Research by C. Patrick Proctor, Chris K. Chang-Bacon

    Chapter 3: Social and Cultural Diversity as Lens for Understanding Student Learning and the Development of Reading Comprehension by Carol D. Lee

    Chapter 4: A Sociocultural Perspective on Readers, Reading, Reading Instruction and Assessment, Reading Policy, and Reading Research by Peter Smagorinsky, Mary Guay, Tisha Lewis Ellison, Arlette I. Willis

    Part three: How Do Expanding Forms of Texts and Everyday Communication Change the Game for Readers, Teachers, Leaders, and Reading Researchers?

    Chapter 5: Reading Multiple and Non-Traditional Texts: New Opportunities and New Challenges by Ivar Bråten, Jason L. G. Braasch, Ladislao Salmerón

    Chapter 6: Who reads what, in which formats, and why by Margaret Mackey

    Chapter 7: Digital Reading: A Research Assessment by Naomi S. Baron

    Chapter 8: Multimodal Critical Inquiry: Nurturing Decolonial Imaginaries by Gerald Campano, T. Philip Nichols, Grace D. Player

    Part Four: How Do Expanding Conceptualizations of Readers Change the Game

    for Teachers, Leaders, and Reading Researchers?Chapter 9: The Language for School Literacy: Widening the Lens on Language and Reading Relations by Paola Uccelli, Emily Phillips Galloway, Wenjuan Qin

    Chapter 10: Readers' Individual Differences in Affect and Cognition by Emily Fox

    Chapter 11: Continuities Between Early Language Development and Reading Comprehension by Kiren Khan, Laura Justice

    Chapter 12: What do we know today about the complexity of vocabulary gaps and what do we not know? By Jeannette Mancilla-Martinez, Janna Brown McClain

    Chapter 13: The role of knowledge in understanding and learning from text by Gina N. Cervetti, Tanya S. Wright

    Chapter 14: Defining Deep Reading Comprehension for Diverse Readers by Laura K. Allen, Danielle S. McNamara

    Part Five: How Do Expanding Conceptions of Teacher, Reader, and Text Interaction Change the Game for Reading Researchers, Teachers, Leaders, and Policy Makers?

    Chapter 15: The Joint Development of Literacy and Self-Regulation in Early Childhood: Implications for Research and Practice by Emily C. Hanno, Stephanie M. Jones, Dana C. McCoy

    Chapter 16: Literacy instruction and individual differences in students' cognitive development by Jin Kyoung Hwang, Carol McDonald Connor

    Chapter 17: Social and Cultural Differences in Reading Development: Instructional Processes, Learning Gains, and Challenges by Allison Skerrett

    Chapter 18: Learning Academic Language, Comprehending Text by Dianna Townsend, Ana Taboada Barber, Hannah Carter

    Chapter 19: High quality classroom language environments promote reading development in young children and older learners by Perla B. Gámez

    Chapter 20: Expanding Teaching and Learning with Disciplinary Texts: The Case of Reading and Science by Cynthia Greenleaf, Kathleen Hinchman

    Chapter 21: Literacy Instruction and Digital Innovation: Trends and Affordances for Digital Equity in Classrooms by Silvia Noguerón-Liu, Jayne C. Lammers

    Chapter 22: Restorying Critical Literacies by Ebony Elizabeth Thomas, Jane Bean-Folkes, James Joshua Coleman

    Chapter 23: More Connected and More Distant than Ever: Toward a Cosmopolitan Ethics of Digital Literacies by David Sabey, Kevin M. Leander

    Part Six: How New Research Methods Change the Game for Reading Researchers and Policy Makers

    Chapter 24: The Use of Video Data in Reading Research by Brian Rowan, Bridget Maher, Mark White

    Chapter 25: Examining the Process of Reading in Media Text Environments: A Methodological Perspective by Byeong-Young Cho

    Chapter 26: How Can Neuroscience Bridge Gaps in Reading Research by Kimberly G. Noble, Katrina R. Simon

    Chapter 27: Qualitative Case Study Methodology Driven by Sociocultural Perspectives by Carmen M. Martínez-Roldán

    Part Seven: Minding the Gaps: Translating Reading Research as the Game is Changing

    Chapter 28: Concluding Thoughts from the Editors

    Contributor Biographies

    Biography

    Elizabeth Birr Moje is Dean of the School of Education, George Herbert Mead Collegiate Professor of Education, an Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, and a Faculty Associate in the Institute for Social Research and Latina/o Studies at the University of Michigan, USA.

    Peter P. Afflerbach is Professor of Reading in the Department of Teaching and Learning, Policy and Leadership at the University of Maryland, USA.

    Patricia Enciso is Professor of Literacy, Literature, and Equity Studies in the Department of Teaching and Learning at the College of Education and Human Ecology, and Faculty Associate in Latinx Studies, at The Ohio State University, USA.

    Nonie K. Lesaux is Juliana W. and William Foss Thompson Professor of Education and Society at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, USA.