ABSTRACT

The Seventh Edition of this foundational text represents the most comprehensive source available for connecting multiple and diverse theories to literacy research, broadly defined, and features both cutting-edge and classic contributions from top scholars. Two decades into the 21st century, the Seventh Edition finds itself at a crossroads and differs from its predecessors in three major ways: the more encompassing term literacy replaces reading in the title to reflect sweeping changes in how readers and writers communicate in a digital era; the focus is on conceptual essays rather than a mix of essays and research reports in earlier volumes; and most notably, contemporary literacy models and processes enhance and extend earlier theories of reading and writing. Providing a tapestry of models and theories that have informed literacy research and instruction over the years, this volume’s strong historical grounding serves as a springboard from which new perspectives are presented. The chapters in this volume have been selected to inspire the interrogation of literacy theory and to foster its further evolution. This edition is a landmark volume in which dynamic, dialogic, and generative relations of power speak directly to the present generation of literacy theorists and researchers without losing the historical contexts that preceded them. Some additional archival essays from previous editions are available on the book’s eResource.

New to the Seventh Edition:

  • Features chapters on emerging and contemporary theories that connect directly to issues of power and contrasts new models against more established counterparts.
  • New chapters reflect sweeping changes in how readers and writers communicate in a digital era.
  • Slimmer volume is complemented by some chapters from previous editions available online.

section Section Two|177 pages

Cognitive and Sociocognitive

chapter 5|13 pages

Reading as Situated Language

A Sociocognitive Perspective

chapter 6|18 pages

The Drive Model of Reading

Deploying Reading in Varied Environments

chapter 8|15 pages

To ERR is Human

Learning About Language Processes by Analyzing Miscues

chapter 9|17 pages

Dual Coding Theory

An Embodied Theory of Literacy

chapter 11|29 pages

A Sociocognitive Model of Meaning-Construction

The Reader, the Teacher, the Text, and the Classroom Context

section Section Three|68 pages

Sociocultural

chapter 14|20 pages

Toward a More Anatomically Complete Model of Literacy Development

A Focus on Black Male Students and Texts

chapter 15|18 pages

Play as the Literacy of Children

Imagining Otherwise in Contemporary Childhoods

chapter 16|28 pages

New Literacies

A Dual-Level Theory of the Changing Nature of Literacy, Instruction, and Assessment

section Section Four|102 pages

Critical

chapter 17|13 pages

Regrounding Critical Literacy

Representation, Facts and Reality

chapter 18|19 pages

A Relational Model of Adolescent Literacy Instruction

Disrupting the Discourse of "Every Teacher a Teacher of Reading"

chapter 20|18 pages

Gender Identitywoke

A Theory of Trans*+ness for Animating Literacy Practices

chapter 21|11 pages

Untapped Possibilities

Intersectionality Theory and Literacy Research

chapter 22|19 pages

Re-Imagining Teacher Education

section Section Five|152 pages

Looking Back, Looking Forward

chapter 25|12 pages

Multilanguaging and Infinite Relations of Dependency

Re-theorizing Reading Literacy from Ubuntu

chapter 27|19 pages

The Social Practice of Multimodal Reading

A New Literacy Studies—Multimodal Perspective on Reading

chapter 28|30 pages

Enacting Rhetorical Literacies

The Expository Reading and Writing Curriculum in Theory and Practice