Reading Motivation: A Guide to Understanding and Supporting Children's Willingness to Read explains the importance of paying careful attention to children's developing motivation to read and offers a step-by-step guide for conducting rigourous and systematic case studies of children's motivation to read in specific contexts (e.g., reading intervention programs).
The methods described in this book have been used successfully to elicit the perspectives of children as young as five years of age. In addition to carefully considering the views of children, readers are encouraged to work with peers to carefully select, collect, and analyse multiple types of data from a variety of sources to answer questions about their students' motivation in trustworthy ways. Separate chapters explain how to formatively and summatively analyse and interpret qualitative and quantitative data and how to present findings and make changes to programming in response to findings. A summary and a guided activity appear at the end of each chapter to support the reader in practising the skills introduced in the chapter.
Foreword - Ruth Wharton-McDonald
Preface - Joy Dangora Erickson and Luke Reynolds
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1.
Why Should I Probe My Students’ Program-Specific Motivation?
Joy Dangora Erickson
Chapter 2.
Ok, Ok, I’m In! Now What?! Defining Your Case and Refining Your Inquiry Question
Joy Dangora Erickson and Beth Fornauf
Chapter 3.
Standing on the Shoulders of Giants: Using the Work of Others to Support Your Project
Joy Dangora Erickson and Alessandra E. Ward
Chapter
4. Data Collection: Deciding What to Collect and How to Collect It
Joy Dangora Erickson and Beth Fornauf
Chapter
5. How am I Going to Fit Data Collection into My Packed Day? Outlining a Data Collection Plan
Joy Dangora Erickson and Kyleigh P. Rousseau
Chapter
6. I Have to Analyze All of This Too?! Drafting an Analysis Plan That Works for You
Beth Fornauf and Joy Dangora Erickson
Chapter
7. Help! I’m Drowning in Data! Making Sense of Qualitative Data
Joy Dangora Erickson and Alessandra E. Ward
Chapter
8. What About Pre and Post Motivation Survey Scores? How Might They Support My Conclusions? Simple Quantitative Data Analysis
Carla M. Evans
Chapter
9. Presentations and Publications: Engaging Others in Your Work Inside and Outside of the Immediate Community
Joy Dangora Erickson and Cara E. Furman
Chapter
10. Tweaking Your Practice, Documenting What Happens, and Beginning Again
Joy Dangora Erickson & Alessandra E. Ward
Epilogue
Joy Dangora Erickson and Cara E. Furman
About the Author and Contributors
"Who selects reading programs? Oftentimes, administrators and teachers; in short: adults. Problematizing the commonplace action of excluding children from co-designing curriculum and seeking to democratize reading, Reading Motivation urges teachers to recognize and honor children’s voices in the selection of reading programs in which they participate. Centering the individual child and their needs and interests, this book offers pathways for understanding the power of case studies to the teaching of reading. The case studies presented, positioned as tools for teachers to learn alongside students, offer important windows into the agency and ingenuity of young children as capable curriculum co-designers and motivated readers. In addition to rich examples, readers are invited to learn alongside the authors via activities, which support new and experienced educators in documenting children’s interests, ultimately impacting their motivation to read."
- Mariana Souto-Manning, PhD, president, Erikson Institute
"Supporting young readers’ motivation is essential in developing reading instruction that is centered on students’ instructional and socioemotional needs and their linguistic and cultural strengths. Reading Motivation helps teachers understand the important role of motivation through descriptive case studies, connections of theory to practice, and practical activities to guide teachers in supporting young readers’ motivation. Erickson explores this important dimension of effective reading instruction in this valuable book appropriate for teachers of all levels."
- Margaret Vaughn, Associate Professor of literacy, Washington State University