ABSTRACT

Boys, Masculinities and Reading explores elementary students’ interpretations of their experiences of reading and the contextual influences that impact those experiences. While research continues to highlight the apparent systematic underperformance of boys in comparison to girls on national and international reading benchmarks, this text moves beyond broad generalizations to consider complexities inherent in notions of masculinity and associated tensions. Applying a socio-cultural perspective, Scholes highlights the voices of boys and girls by focusing on their reading experiences. Examining the perceived, generalized "crisis" of boys’ underperformance in reading and literacy, Scholes identifies the factors that shape perceptions of masculinity among different groups of boys across the globe.

chapter 1|32 pages

Boys, Masculinities and Reading

Gender Identity and Literacy as Social Practice

chapter 2|29 pages

Multiple Masculinities

Perspectives on Gender

chapter 3|27 pages

Literacy as Social Practice

Social, Cultural and Political Dimensions of Reading

chapter 4|18 pages

Ecological Perspectives

Masculinities and Reading as Ecological Metaphors

chapter 5|16 pages

Diversity and Difference in the Classroom

Six Clusters of Students

chapter 6|19 pages

I Love Reading!

The Dream Team and the Archetypal Commoners

chapter 7|15 pages

Reading Is for Nerds!

The Bored and Banal and the Low Riders

chapter 8|18 pages

Hide That Book!

The Clandestine Readers and the Outsiders

chapter 9|26 pages

Real-World Influences on Students’ Literate Practices

Enabling and Constraining Domains of Experience

chapter 10|18 pages

Boys (and Girls) in the Literacy Classroom

Moving Forward