Literacy Across Languages
Dr. Ana Taboada-Barber is a professor of education at the University of Maryland whose research focuses on reading comprehension and motivation in emergent bilingual and bilingual students. A former ESL teacher, her work examines how cognitive and motivational factors influence literacy development, with particular attention to Spanish-speaking English learners in the United States and South America, as well as bilingual students in international contexts. This episode explores how multilingual learners bring unique cognitive strengths that challenge traditional models of reading and instruction. Dr. Taboada-Barber invites educators to view bilingualism as an integrated language system and highlights the bridging processes that connect languages, the role of executive function in reading, and the critical impact of engagement, motivation, and content-rich learning on reading comprehension. She also offers concrete instructional strategies for building intentional cross-language connections in both bilingual and English-only settings. Key Takeaways: 1. Bilingual students are not two separate monolinguals operating independently. Their languages are always active, shaping how they process and make meaning from text. 2. The active view of reading introduces bridging as a critical process in comprehension. For multilingual learners, this includes connections between language systems as well as between reading components. 3. Multilingual learners bring powerful cognitive strengths that support reading comprehension. Executive functions and executive control help them manage attention, process language, and navigate meaning across contexts. Timestamps: (00:00) Welcome to Literacy Across Languages! (01:24) Meet Dr. Ana Taboada-Barber (05:45) All Languages are Always Active in the Multilingual Brain (09:19) The Active View of Reading for Bilingual Learners (13:17) Teaching Moves for Bridging Processes and Languages in Reading Instruction (17:15) Executive Function and Control in Multilingual Readers (26:21) Engagement as a Driver of Multilingual Reading Achievement (30:09) Integrating Literacy, Language, and Content (33:00) Designing Dual Language Programs for Transfer (35:43) Planning for Effective Bridging Processes (38:01) Understanding Executive Function and Control in Multilingual Reading (41:09) Language as Identity (43:06) Takeaways for Teaching Episode Resources: 1. Explore the Active View of Reading [https://www.nellkduke.org/the-active-view-of-reading] model (as we eagerly await the forthcoming AVR for Bilingual Learners!). 2. Learn more about Patrick Proctor, Rebecca Silverman, and Renata Love Jones’s [https://www.clavescurriculum.net/_files/ugd/84e775_caf86a569cb1465e8669acffe4f8ae93.pdf] work on CLAVES, a language-based literacy curriculum designed for multilingual learners. 3. Dive into Ellen Bialystok’s [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3305827/] research on bilingualism and executive function to better understand the cognitive strengths of multilingual learners. Stay Connected: * Visit us at literacyacrosslanguages.com [http://literacyacrosslanguages.com]. * Email us with questions or episode suggestions at literacyacrosslanguages@gmail.com [literacyacrosslanguages@gmail.com]. * Follow Mary [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mary-sandoval-52ab893a/] and Katherine [https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-nelson-66570b57/] on LinkedIn. * Like, subscribe, and share this episode with fellow educators, or share a review to help others find us! Keywords: multilingual learners, bilingual education, reading comprehension, executive function, executive control, translanguaging, active view of reading, simple view of reading, literacy development, language acquisition, engagement, reading motivation, bridging strategies, dual language instruction, cognitive flexibility, working memory, inhibition, academic vocabulary, content-based instruction, science of reading, language systems, bilingual cognition, knowledge building, instructional planning, student engagement, oral language development
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