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Fostering Literacy And Inquiry

By Barbara K. Stripling -- Learning Quarterly, 9/1/2003

We must be making progress on the educational front. We have moved from the "Reading Wars" (the conflict between phonics and whole language) to the "High Literacy Crisis" (the failure to teach sophisticated comprehension skills to our students). To flourish in today's information society, young people must be able to read and understand different kinds of prose. They must evaluate sources, find main ideas and supporting evidence, draw conclusions, write creatively and persuasively, and use reading and writing to learn independently. To develop those abilities, students need instruction and guided practice in reading, writing, speaking, and listening throughout their school years.

Unfortunately, most teachers in upper elementary, middle, and high schools have not been trained to teach these literacy skills. Fortunately, most teacher librarians have, because a closer examination of "high literacy" skills shows that they are essentially the same skills taught whenever students are using the library.

The Inquiry Process

 

The Inquiry Process

Connect
  • Connect to self, previous knowledge
  • Gain background knowledge to set context for new learning
  • Observe, experience
Wonder
  • Develop questions
  • Make predictions, hypotheses
Investigate
  • Find and evaluate information to answer questions, test hypotheses
  • Think about the information to illuminate new questions and hypotheses
Construct
  • Construct new understandings connected to previous knowledge
  • Draw conclusions about questions and hypotheses
Express
  • Express new ideas to share learning with others
  • Apply understandings to a new context, new situation
Reflect
  • Reflect on own process of learning and on new understandings gained from inquiry
  • Ask new questions
Inquiry is a way of learning that requires active engagement. The learner identifies what he already knows, asks intriguing questions about what he does not know, investigates the answers, constructs new understandings, and shares those understandings with others (see chart at right).

If instruction in information literacy or inquiry skills develops these independent learning skills in students, then it is not surprising that research studies reveal that academic achievement is positively impacted by the presence of an effective school library with a qualified librarian. In fact, a library program that is structured around inquiry can help an entire school develop a community of literacy and inquiry that supports meaningful learning and high achievement.

Library Environment for Literacy and Inquiry

Teachers and teacher librarians have the greatest impact on learning by creating a library environment that invites students to participate, challenges them to learn, and fosters inquiry and literacy throughout the curriculum.

The library engages students in reading by offering diverse resources that appeal to their needs and interests, by promoting reading through special programs and book clubs, and by ensuring open and equitable access to every student. Writing is enhanced when the students are offered opportunities to "go public" with their writing on the library's Web site or display boards. When the library becomes a public forum for the sharing of ideas, speaking and listening skills are enhanced.

On the instructional side, teacher librarians and classroom teachers can create communities of literacy and inquiry. By collaborating, they can balance direct teaching of inquiry and literacy skills with guided practice during student investigations and with independent practice in reading, writing, and inquiry.

The Inquiry-Literacy Connection

A library program fosters a schoolwide community of inquiry by focusing on the connections between inquiry and literacy that provide motivation, authenticity, and context for learning.

Motivation

Because students ask their own questions and pursue their own answers, inquiry gives purpose to literacy skills. Michael W. Smith and Jeffrey D. Wilhelm, the authors of "Reading Don't Fix No Chevys": Literacy in the Lives of Young Men (Heinemann, 2002), found that inquiry motivated adolescent males to learn literacy skills. The young men enjoyed finding out about what interested them. They loved becoming an "expert" on particular topics and sharing their knowledge with peers.

Authenticity

Authentic learning involves the construction of knowledge, not just accumulation of facts. It requires the disciplined use of thinking skills and connection to real life and value beyond school. During inquiry, learners use thinking and high-level literacy skills to construct understanding about their own questions and connect that knowledge to the real world outside of school. Educational researchers, as well as practicing teachers and teacher librarians, have discovered that authenticity leads to enhanced development of both learning skills and content knowledge.

Context

The building of background knowledge or context is a third essential component to the symbiotic relationship between inquiry and literacy. E. D. Hirsch and others have emphasized the importance of background knowledge to literacy. Context is equally important to inquiry. Young people can comprehend text and learn new ideas when they can attach new concepts to what they already know. The more students read and inquire throughout their school years, the more they acquire background knowledge and an understanding of the world, and thus the more they learn.

Inquiry Across the Curriculum

Some of the characteristics and skills of inquiry cut across all grades and subjects:

Embedded in inquiry are the effective reading and writing skills that cascade down through the grades. These include questioning, finding main ideas and details, summarizing, interpreting, making inferences, determining the importance of ideas, identifying the author's purpose, and synthesizing.

Although all the steps of the inquiry process are necessary, students do not have to perform each step if teacher librarians provide guidance and scaffolding (like offering pathfinders, developing inquiry questions with the class, or providing a list of the best Web sites for a particular research project).

Graphic organizers are helpful for any type of inquiry. Virtually every student benefits from attaching new information to a schema. With enough experience, students can organize their own thinking and develop their own schema. Until they are able to do so, teacher librarians should provide templates, instruction, and guidance.

Other aspects of literacy and inquiry should be tailored more specifically to each discipline. The chart on the opposite page provides a glimpse of inquiry in the content areas.

Inquiry and Literacy Through the Library

Teacher librarians have a responsibility to ensure that all children and adolescents develop the inquiry and literacy skills needed to become independent learners. When inquiry and literacy become the focus of their programs, teacher librarians will have established a permanent and powerful connection between school libraries and the academic achievement and personal development of our youths.

This article is adapted from "Inquiry-Based Learning," a chapter in a forthcoming book called Curriculum Connections Through the Library: Principles and Practice (Libraries Unlimited, 2003).

 

Inquiry and Literacy in the Content Areas

Inquiry/Literacy Characteristics:
  • Science
  • Math
  • Social Studies
  • Literature/Language Arts
Overview
  • Study of natural world.
  • Study of patterns and relationships in natural world.
  • Study of human interactions with world and other humans.
  • Study of human interactions in all realms— social, personal, mental, physical. Study of reading and writing processes.
Inquiry
  • Search for truth; explanation of physical world based on accurate and replicable information.
  • Search for patterns that describe the natural world.
  • Search for interpretations of human interactions; multiple perspectives; evidence to support interpretations; conclusions supported by careful synthesis of evidence.
  • Search for real-world authenticity of literature. Search for meaningful answers to authentic questions.
Prior Knowledge/Background Knowledge
  • Inaccurate personal theories must be confronted prior to inquiry or new, accurate ideas will not replace old, inaccurate mental models.
  • Because math is so sequential, identifying misunderstandings is essential before new knowledge can be built.
  • Importance of context for understanding multiple points of view (e.g., soldiers' view of war is different from families' perceptions and politicians' conclusions).
  • If students are following their own line of inquiry, they may have background knowledge, but it may be inaccurate, spotty, or biased.
Prediction/Hypothesis
  • Scientific inquiry is built on sound prediction (hypothesis) that focuses thinking and prepares for recognition of important information.
  • Prediction (estimation) of solution leads to selection of relevant data and use of appropriate problem-solving techniques.
  • Prediction of probable points of evidence leads to focused searching and identification of gaps in information.
  • Prediction is a literacy skill that leads to identification of prior knowledge and enhanced comprehension.
Evaluation of Sources
  • Important criteria for science: currency in elementary school; authors' credentials in middle school; comprehensiveness of data in high school.
  • Important criterion for math: authority of source.
  • Important criteria for social studies: authority of author and publisher; point of view; comprehensiveness; primary versus secondary source.
  • Important criterion for language arts: ability to apply evaluation criteria appropriate for area studied (e.g., inquiry into a current social issue would require a look at currency, balanced point of view, credible evidence).
Evaluation of Information
  • The main criteria are accuracy, validity, and reliability of evidence.
  • The main criteria are accuracy and logic.
  • Evaluation of social studies is critically important due to its interpretive nature. Evaluation should be based on critical reading skills: differentiating fact from opinion, recognizing point of view, detecting bias, and assessing comprehensiveness and validity of evidence.
  • Because students may be pursuing their own line of inquiry, they should evaluate evidence based on relevance, validity, point of view, and usefulness for answering inquiry questions.
Visual Literacy
  • Must be able to read and understand information in charts, graphs, tables, and diagrams.
  • Information is contained in numbers and symbols and in the relative position of those symbols.
  • Geographical and social data may be contained in maps, charts, and graphs.
  • Information may be communicated in visual symbols and organization of language (as in poetry).
Vocabulary
  • Scientific vocabulary = precise definitions of terms; use of context to expand definitions beyond literal definition to broader conceptual understanding.
  • Mathematical vocabulary = precise definitions, such as "slope."
  • Vocabulary is dependent on historical context and connotation of words.
  • Connotation is very important for deriving full meaning. Especially in literature, the fullest understanding of vocabulary comes through context.
Text Structures
  • Often linear—building evidence point by point until conclusion is reached; may be concept followed by examples.
  • Different from expository text—information may be arranged left to right, top to bottom, or bottom left to top right.
  • Text may be arranged in a number of ways: concept and examples; cause and effect; comparison or contrast; main idea and supporting evidence; chronological sequence; and point-of-view analysis.
  • Narrative (short stories, novels, poetry, and drama) follows a story line. Expository text (essays, informational text) is often arranged as concept and examples, main idea and supporting evidence, or point-by-point analysis.
Authenticity
  • Important to find real-world application of scientific principles.
  • Because math is abstract, it is important to connect to real-world situations.
  • Authentic documents are essential to inquiry in social studies. Primary sources must be evaluated based on their context (e.g., a private diary versus a public statement).
  • Inquiry motivated by students' own questions is the most authentic. Students stretch their inquiry and literacy skills when they find answers to authentic questions.

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