
Tung Vu
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Canh Truong
| Socioeconomic development has recently broadened the gap
between social classes, leading to inequality in society. Therefore,
issues of social justice emerge as urgent social ethics to be taken into
account. One approach to address this phenomenon is raising
individuals’ awareness of its existence, then enacting solutions to halt
the problems. Education comes into play. According to Adam, Bell, and
Griffin (2007), one way of enacting social justice involves teachers
explicitly teaching about social justice with the aim to increase
student consciousness of and capacity for addressing social justice
issues. The methods to raise students’ awareness of social justice vary; nonetheless, enhancing their critical thinking via reading skills is seen as one of the most effective ways. Meanwhile, studies
have shown that student engagement in reading is the highest when
teachers implement extensive reading (ER) (Sheu, 2003; Yu, 1999). In the
field of second language education, ER is regarded as an effective
approach to bring social justice into schools.
At a small scale, in this paper, the writers focus on civic
engagement as a factor of social justice. With the aim to make more
robust students’ awareness of their role with the community, we propose
teaching activities incorporating civic engagement in classrooms by
encouraging students to improve their critical thinking via extensive
reading implementation. Furthermore, some issues relating to choosing
suitable reading materials for learners will also be
addressed.
Civic Engagement
Civic engagement in language teaching has recently attracted
significant attention from both educators and researchers all over the
world in order to fully describe the vital role of integrating social
phenomena in education. Nonetheless, it is still a novice theme in
Vietnam, especially in an EFL context. To define civic engagement, Preus
et al. (2016) claim that it aims to develop citizens capable of making
appropriate decisions in a wide range of social and political scenarios,
ranging from voting, obeying laws, providing community service,
supporting political campaigns, community organizing, and protesting. In
order to make precise decisions given those demands of society,
learners need to be equipped with sound background knowledge. To solve
this problem, extensive reading (ER) is recommended as a suitable
approach in encouraging students’ reading capacity and broadening
knowledge.
Extensive Reading
Davis (1995) states that extensive reading (ER) is a way to
give learners time, encourage them, let them read as many materials as
possible in pleasure, within their levels and without washback effects.
According to Maley (2009), extensive reading is understood as a method
that motivates learners to read for their pleasure and information, with
a vast number of materials and a wide range of topics with their own
choice of books and a fast speed. The Extensive Reading Foundation Guide
(2011) describes extensive reading as a teaching approach that helps
students become better at the skill of reading rather than reading to
study the language itself. This shows that the immediate focus of ER is
on the content being read, rather than on language skills.
As a consequence, if learners take part in ER activity, they
first gradually become more autonomous and critical with their
understanding from various events, especially sensitive topics in civic
engagement.Then, foremost, these students are likely to consolidate what they have known and extend it, to accumulate a thoughtful lens in a critical evaluation that finally leads to practical actions illustrating their concern with society.
In our opinions, to integrate effectively civic engagement into
teaching extensive reading, some topics are necessary to help us seek a
source of what Young (1990) entailed. According to Young (1990), social
justice is an act which can be identified via five “facets” of
oppression, such as exploitation, marginalization, powerlessness,
cultural imperialism, and violence. Thus, Young’s (1990) perspectives are helpful to ground the reading materials in the following section.
Extensive Reading Implementation
In our opinion, we strongly believe that ER plays a crucial
role in nurturing the development of civic responsibility for students
due to its positive effect in increasing their critical thinking on
social events. Thus, the inquires of how to implement ER in EFL teaching
context have driven the authors to present some proposed teaching
activities that reach various English proficiency levels, from beginning
to advanced learners. These suggestions were made based on the
theoretical framework called Bloom’s taxonomy, which illustrates six
major categories in the cognitive domain including knowledge,
comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. It
represents a cumulative hierarchy in the sense that the six categories
of the cognitive process differ in their complexity to help determine
the cognitive levels of reading materials or teaching activities posed
by teachers.
Despite the heterogeneity of students’ English proficiency
among participants, all the teaching activities are supposed to boost
students’ critical thinking as the highest level in Bloom’s taxonomy.
However, we suggest that teachers should be concerned with different
learning characteristics in each level in order to scaffold suitable
reading materials and teaching activities, because the ability to read
in a foreign language presents a daunting challenge to the language
learner. To make it manageable, we classify activities for three groups
of learners, namely A2 (beginning), B1 (intermediate), and C1 (advanced)
based on CEFR, the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages
(Council of Europe, 2001).
For beginners. At this stage, because
learners hold a limited source of vocabulary, teachers are advised to
employ a lot of reading materials which enable learners to familiarize
themselves with various common issues of social justice, but at a
surface level, which requires them to have short responses with current
vocabularies and sentence-making competences. Furthermore, in order to
help them advance their understanding of these topics, teachers can
undertake furthering discussions with a series of single questions (e.g.
Yes/No questions, or “Why”-questions). Importantly, students should not
be put under stress regarding using a high level of language words and
structures. For example, selected texts should include high-frequency
vocabulary. In terms of teaching activities, teachers are advised to
design their teaching plans based on Bloom’s taxonomy, which starts fromremembering, understanding, applying, analysing, evaluating and creating. For
beginner students, students should be instructed on the first two levels
of, remembering knowledge and understanding the reading. Some activities that
teachers may find useful are listed in Table 1.
Table 1. Recommended Teaching Activities and Reading Materials for Beginners
For intermediate and advanced learners.
From our teaching experience, we have to admit that distinguishing
intermediate and advanced learners is itself a challenge for educators
and instructors due to the similarity in learning characteristics that
they share. However, advanced students are autonomous language learners,
which means they can progress on their own without a teacher or
structured method, through sheer immersion, while intermediate learners
still require scaffolding from a teacher, a book, or any structured
learning system (Leyre, 2017). Nonetheless, no matter how these two
levels are different, they still share the similar point of focusing on
improving students’ high level of thinking, which can be found at the
highest level of Bloom’s taxonomy as synthesis and evaluation. As a
result, learners can connect what they learn and their background
knowledge, then turn them into practical actions. In terms of reading
materials, all topics referring to civic engagement are appropriate for
these two levels that can be reached via the following
websites.
Table 2. Recommended Teaching Activities and Reading Materials for Intermediate and Advanced Learners
In short, there are various sources for reading materials and
teaching activities to help boost students’ concern for social justice
and to link their academic knowledge with reality practices.
Conclusion
All in all, this very handy proposal for ER implementation in
encouraging students to cultivate sound reading on civic engagement
hopes to assist teachers and educators maximize their teaching purposes.
It is obvious that social justice is an abstract phenomenon, and the
initial aims of any educator are enhancing their students’ ability in
turning their knowledge into actions. This involves solving problems
facing society. However, ER is a long process and teachers are supposed
to be flexible in manifesting their teaching plans to reach their
targets.
References
Adams, M., Bell, L. A., & Griffin, P. (2007). Teaching for diversity and social justice.
Routledge.
Extensive Reading Foundation. (2011). The Extensive
Reading Foundation’s guide to extensive reading. https://erfoundation.org/guide/ERF_Guide.pdf
Ferlazzo, Larry. (2008, July 1). The best teacher resource sites for social justice issues.
Larry Ferlazzo’s websites of the day. https://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/07/01/the-best-teacher-resource-sites-for-social-justice-issues/
Krathwohl, D. R. (2002). A revision of Bloom's taxonomy: An
overview. Theory into Practice, 41(4), 212-218, https://doi.org/10.1207/s15430421tip4104_2
Preus, B., Payne, R., Wick, C., & Glomski, E. (2016).
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Sheu, S. P.-H. (2004). Effects of extensive reading on
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Taipei Teachers College, 17(2), 213–228. https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/The-Effects-of-Extensive-Reading-on-Learners%27-Sheu/04a3e7b1f3512edac7006df34cf602bb424101cc
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cognitive level of questions in social studies textbooks and the views
of teachers based on Bloom’s taxonomy. Educational Sciences:
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Young, Iris Marion. (1990). Justice and the politics
of difference. Princeton University Press.
Yu, V. W. S. (1999). Promoting second language development and
reading habits through an extensive reading scheme. In Y. M. Cheah
& S. M. Ng (Eds.), Language instructional issues in
Asian classrooms (pp. 59-74). International Development in
Asia Committee, International Reading Association.
Tung Vu is a research assistant whose research
focuses on teacher education and intercultural communication.
Canh Truong’s main research interests are issues of
English teaching methodology, the theory of multiple intelligences in
English teaching, and learner autonomy.
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