Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research NWO / PROO Dutch Programme Council for Educational Research Literacy development of at-risk adolescents in multilingual contexts: A tale of three cities Amos van Gelderen, Jan Hulstijn, Paul Leseman, Ron Oostdam, Peter Sleegers University of Amsterdam
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Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research NWO / PROO Dutch Programme Council for Educational Research Literacy development of at-risk adolescents.
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Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
NWO / PROODutch Programme Council for Educational Research
Literacy development of at-risk
adolescents in multilingual
contexts: A tale of three cities
Amos van Gelderen, Jan Hulstijn,
Paul Leseman, Ron Oostdam, Peter
Sleegers
University of Amsterdam
Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
Backgrounds
Many studies into early development of literacy (especially beginning reading).
Some international comparative studies directed at literacy skills of adolescents in general (e.g. PISA)
Very little is known about literacy development of adolescents and the main factors that influence this development. (Van Gelderen, et al. 2007)
Concerns about:- at-risk students (high risk of school drop out)- multilingual contexts (large numbers of immigrants mixed with non-
immigrants with poor economical prospects)
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Tale of Three Cities (TTC)
Toronto (OISE) Alister Cumming, Esther Geva: ALTUR
Geneva (SRED) Anne Soussi, Jacqueline Lurin: EVOLIT
Amsterdam (SCO-Kohnstamm Institute): SALSA
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PROJECT SALSA
Studies of Adolescent Literacy of Students At-risk
Studies of At-risk students’ Literacy Skills in Amsterdam
Skills and other Aspects of Literacy of Students in Adolescence
Studie naar Achtergronden van Lees en Schrijfontwikkeling bij Adolescenten
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Common frame 1
Home & Community
Environment
Individual Attributes
student literacy
School Environment
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Common frame 2
– Research questions:
1) What are important socio-cultural, educational and individual variables associated with literacy development in multilingual contexts?
2) What patterns of resilience can be found (positive literacy development contrary to initial expectations for at-risk students)?
3) Comparison between literacy development of at-risk and non at-risk students.
4) Comparison of the role of literacy related variables across the three multilingual contexts
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Common frame 3
– The same literacy test (measuring reading comprehension and writing skills), developed in collaboration between Toronto, Geneva and Amsterdam.
– A selection of other instruments for measuring educational, socio-cultural and individual variables.
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Descriptive framework
– Nature of literacy tasks (language, type of communication, medium, topic, addressees, situation) (Jakobssen, 1960);
– Embeddedness of literacy tasks (i.e. exposure in terms of duration, frequency, interruption, timing and intensity) (Bronffenbrenner and Evans, 2000);
– Use of selfregulatory strategies;– Connections of literacy tasks with home/school;– Teaching of literacy in language and non-language curricula from
student and teacher perspectives (reading and writing strategies, literacy tasks, feedback on learning process);
– Individual attributes (skills, attitudes)
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SALSA: part-projects
1. School environment (I. de Milliano, P. Sleegers)2. Home environment (C. Van Kruistum, P. Leseman)3. Individual attributes (M. Trapman, J. Hulstijn)4. Student Literacy (R. van Steensel, R. Oostdam)
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Variables in part projects 1 and 2
school environment (part- project 1)
1) nature of literacy tasks 2) embeddedness of literacy in curriculum3) use of and instruction directed at selfregulatory literacy strategies4) connections with home-environment5) social context of teaching & learning
home and community environment(part-project 2)
1) nature of literacy tasks2) embedding of literacy3) use of selfregulatory literacy strategies4) connections with school-environment5) social context 6) personal backgrounds of students
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Variables in part projects 3 and 4
individual attributes(part-project 3)
1) knowledge of vocabulary and grammar2) metacognitive knowledge about reading and writing3) fluency of word and sentence processing4) non-verbal intelligence5) attitudes towards literacy (in first and second languages)6) immigrants’ home language literacy