From Tutoring to Mentoring: Centering Adolescents Identities as Readers and Mentors in a High School Literacy Class | Academic Article individual record
abstract

Prior research on peer literacy teaching tends to be conceptualized as peer tutoring and often focuses on the cognitive aspects of reading (e.g., skills, strategies). In this multiple case study, we draw on theories of identity and positioning to propose a conceptual shift from tutoring to mentoring to also describe the affective and relational dimensions of peer literacy teaching. In our analysis, we explore how two 11th graders positioned themselves as readers and mentors in a cross-age literacy mentorship class in a public high school in the northeastern United States. Data sources include mentor interviews, field notes, and artifacts. Our multiphase coding process identified three main themes: the importance of (a) texts and (b) relationships and reciprocity to mentors positioning, and (c) complexities of the mentor position. Findings suggest that school-based opportunities for youth to work collaboratively to understand their own and others reading processes may contribute insights into both the affective and the cognitive aspects of peer literacy teaching.

authors
publication outlet

Literacy Research Theory Method and Practice

author list (cited authors)
Frankel, K. K., Fields, S. S., & Ward, A. E.
publication date
2021
publisher
keywords
  • 4 Quality Education
  • Pediatric
  • Prevention
altmetric score

1.0

citation count

0

identifier
542557SE
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
start page
231
end page
251
volume
70
issue
1
UN Sustainable Development Goals