Abstract
This article considers pupil and teacher perceptions of shared reading (SR) in promoting reading engagement. It provides a thematic analysis of focus groups with pupils and teachers at a Swedish upper-secondary school who had participated in an intervention consisting of SR sessions. The findings are triangulated with a pupil pre-intervention questionnaire that included reading habits.
The study is theoretically informed by research about aspects of the multidimensional concept of reading engagement, by aesthetic theories about interpretation’s interrelation with presence, and by psychological theories of joint attention and its effects on social cohesion, reflective reasoning, and perspective-taking.
The pupil and teacher descriptions of their SR experiences show that they conceive of SR as a reading practice that may promote reading engagement. Reading engagement is found to have several dimensions, ranging from the behavioural and cognitive to the social and affective, which in turn are intertwined and reinforce one another.
The study is theoretically informed by research about aspects of the multidimensional concept of reading engagement, by aesthetic theories about interpretation’s interrelation with presence, and by psychological theories of joint attention and its effects on social cohesion, reflective reasoning, and perspective-taking.
The pupil and teacher descriptions of their SR experiences show that they conceive of SR as a reading practice that may promote reading engagement. Reading engagement is found to have several dimensions, ranging from the behavioural and cognitive to the social and affective, which in turn are intertwined and reinforce one another.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Nordic Journal of Literacy Research |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 2024 Nov 15 |
Subject classification (UKÄ)
- Pedagogical Work
- General Language Studies and Linguistics