Adolescent Literacy

Advancing adolescent literacy demands a strong commitment of time, trust, and instructional focus. It encompasses the ability to read, write, comprehend, interpret, and engage in meaningful discussion of multiple grade-level texts across diverse contexts (International Literacy Association, 2012). Grounded in the Science of Reading, current research demonstrates a causal link between targeted instruction and improved reading comprehension. The Active View of Reading (Duke and Cartwright, 2021) offers a framework that highlights what works best for our learners in grades 4-12.

The Active View of Reading (AVR) highlights six key classroom practices as essential for improving adolescent literacy outcomes.

Elements of Effective Classroom Practice

Meaningful and purposeful instruction is essential to literacy growth with adolescents. Transformative teachers and districts develop improved literacy outcomes through the following facets of practice.

“Every student must graduate from high school well prepared for college and a career, which inherently requires access to rigorous, grade-level content” (The US Department of Education, 2010).

Grade Level Expectations and Rigor

Nebraska’s 2021 College and Career Ready Standards for English Language Arts outline grade-level expectations for reading and comprehending both informational and literary texts. These standards support educators in fostering a literacy-rich, standards-aligned environment that encourages peer interaction and engagement.

Nebraska’s Instructional Materials Collaborative provides guidance for selecting and implementing core ELA materials. Classroom Instruction should incorporate evidence-based teaching methods and strategies to engage students in grade-level learning.

Supporting Adolescent Readers: A Guide for Secondary Educators (Utah State Board of Education, 2021, p.15) offers educators tools for high-quality, standards-aligned, effective instruction to adolescent readers.

The ABCs of Rigorous Lesson Design (Hess, 2021) helps students deepen their understanding of what they are learning and enhances engagement through strong Tier One core instruction, which is primarily responsible for knowledge building.

A Nebraska Statewide Workforce & Educational Reporting System (NSWERS) Story, (Brodersen, 2023) highlights the correlation between ACT proficiency and college attendance rates across the state.

Note:  The NeMTSS Framework, pg. 17, provides guidance regarding a strong Tier 1 core instruction. The framework conveys that all students, including students with disabilities, high-ability learners, and English learners, should have access to high-quality instructional materials and instruction. Intervention time should not replace essential, rigorous, grade-level content area instructional time.

“Comprehension is an outcome, and it’s based on being able to read words accurately, know what they mean, have adequate background knowledge, and also be able to make inferences” (Vaughn, S. (Contributor). (2024, February 14). Comprehension is an outcome [Audio Podcast]. Retrieved from Episode 10: Comprehension is an outcome, with Sharon Vaughn | Amplify,).

Comprehension & Vocabulary Instruction

Practice Guide Summaries from the Nebraska Department of Education, developed in partnership with REL Central at Marzano Research, are a series of condensed evidence-based practice guides from the What Works Clearinghouse for use by Nebraska educators.

Evidence-Based Practices for Vocabulary Instruction (The University of Texas at Austin, 2020) offers recommendations for teaching vocabulary and word meanings within context, specifically for adolescent learners.

Note: Although vocabulary instruction is important, there is limited evidence that direct teaching of word meanings alone significantly improves comprehension (International Literacy Association, 2016).

“Increased amounts and quality of open, sustained discussion of reading content directly enhances students’ ability to think about and learn from text” (Beck & McKeown, 2006).

Speaking & Listening

Practice Guide Summaries from the Nebraska Department of Education, developed in partnership with REL Central at Marzano Research, are a series of condensed evidence-based practice guides from the What Works Clearinghouse for use by Nebraska educators.

  • Effective discussion may involve constructing comprehension and exploring outcomes through cognitive engagement, as well as connecting personal knowledge with attentive listening to others.

Five Areas of Instructional Improvement to Increase Academic Literacy (Torgesen, 2007) emphasizes how increased quantity and quality of sustained discussion about reading content directly enhance students’ ability to think critically and learn from text.

Discussion Protocols (Teaching & Learning Lab, 2015) offer structured approaches to guide student responses to text while preserving autonomy and promoting authentic engagement.

Listening in on Student Learning (National Council of Teachers of English, 2019) provides educators with valuable insights into what students are learning and how they are learning it.

Roles of engagement: Analyzing adolescent students’ talk during controversial discussions (Al-Adeimi & Baumann, 2023) explores how classroom teachers can leverage students’ roles in discussion to promote diverse perspectives and deeper knowledge development.

“Literacy instruction that balanced reading and writing significantly improved students’ reading comprehension” (Graham et al., 2018).

Explicit Writing Instruction

Practice Guide Summaries from the Nebraska Department of Education, developed in partnership with REL Central at Marzano Research, are a series of condensed evidence-based practice guides from the What Works Clearinghouse for use by Nebraska educators.

Teaching Secondary Students to Write Effectively (National Center for Education Evaluation, 2017) offers specific, evidence-based recommendations to address the challenges of teaching writing in grades 6–12.

The Writing Revolution (Hochman & Wexler, 2017) is a transformative resource that not only teaches writing explicitly but also provides a framework for improving student thinking, reading comprehension, and content mastery. It  emphasizes embedding writing within content instruction–such as history, science, literature–rather than teaching it in isolation.

The Writing Rope (Sedita, 2022) presents a comprehensive framework for effective writing instruction, including elements such as critical thinking, syntax, text structure, writing craft, and transcription.

Student Achievement Partners offers annotated writing samples that demonstrate the integration of content understanding and writing across the three major writing types: narrative, informative/explanatory, and argumentative/opinion.

The Nebraska Writing Project connects professional educators and writers, offering a repository of writing that enhances and celebrates writing classrooms and communities across the state.

The National Writing Project brings together educators, faculty, and writers nationwide to improve writing instruction, foster collaboration, and encourage reflection. It creates opportunities to reexamine perspectives and relationships through writing.

“Good adolescent readers are purposeful, strategic, and critical readers who understand the content presented in various types of texts” (National Institute for Literacy, 2007).

Collaboration Across Content

Disciplinary Literacy: A Shift that Makes Sense (Lent, 2017) honors content-area expertise by focusing on what students need to know and how to teach those skills while delivering subject-specific instruction.

What Content-Area Teachers Should Know About Adolescent Literacy (National Institute for Literacy, 2007) addresses the urgent need for middle and high school teachers, administrators, and parents how to support immediate adolescents’ reading and writing skills.

Essential Instructional Practices for Disciplinary Literacy in the Secondary Classroom (Michigan Association of Intermediate School Administrators General Education Leadership Network Disciplinary Literacy Task Force, 2019), outlines key instructional practices for secondary classrooms.

“Comprehension skills must not be ignored and should be taught in conjunction with targeted areas of intervention. Remediating prerequisite areas of weakness is ultimately a step toward greater comprehension” (McKenna, M.C. & Stahl, K.A.D., 2015).

Assessment & Intervention

Practice Guide Summaries from the Nebraska Department of Education, developed in partnership with REL Central at Marzano Research, are a series of condensed evidence-based practice guides from the What Works Clearinghouse for use by Nebraska educators.

Nebraska’s Multi-Tiered System of Support (NeMTSS) Framework helps schools deliver the right interventions at the right time. This framework emphasizes the importance of strong Tier 1 core instruction for all learners promoting equitable access to high-quality instruction, evidence-based practices, and collaborative support.

Effective Instruction for Adolescent Struggling Readers: A Practice Brief (The Center on Instruction, 2008) offers evidence-based strategies tailored to the instructional needs of older students.

Improving Adolescent Literacy: Effective Classroom Practices & Interventions (Institute of Education Sciences, 2008) presents practical strategies for teachers and specialists to enhance adolescent reading skills.

Primary Considerations for Adolescent Literacy (The Reading League, 2024) is a comprehensive resource designed to support educators in addressing the challenges of implementing interventions for older, striving readers.

Reading Science Considerations for Middle and High School Literacy Intervention (Petricone-Turchetta, S., 2021) explores how the Science of Reading can inform intervention and instruction at the secondary level.

Teaching Adolescents to Read: It’s Not Too Late (Moats, 2015) underscores the critical importance of providing interventions for all striving learners, regardless of grade level.

Adolescent Literacy Facts

Despite high levels of student discourse, the maximum amount of high-quality discussions in classrooms around the world equated to two minutes per day. ~  The National Research Center on English Learning and Achievement (CELA)

“Over the past two decades, middle level students’ literacy scores have been flat. High school student’s literacy scores have decreased.” ~ National Association of Secondary School Principals

“In the most recent tests in writing, only 27% of 8th and 12th graders in the United States perform at the proficient level or above.” ~ The Writing Revolution

Additional Resources

Adolescent Literacy Interest Group from the International Literacy Association brings together educators, administrators, and researchers to share resources, research, ideas, and dilemmas related to helping all teens become competent and confident readers, writers, and learners.

Literacy Tips for Parents of Adolescents (Institute of Education Sciences, 2016) is an infographic that highlights the activities that parents can initiate at home to help ensure successful literacy outcomes for their adolescent children.

Shanahan on Literacy authored by Timothy Shanahan, –one of the world’s premier literacy educators and a 2007 inductee into the Reading Hall–offers expert insights into effective literacy practices.

StandardsWork emphasizes building students’ world knowledge through reading, writing, speaking, and listening to help them engage with essential questions within texts.

The Knowledge Matters Campaign advocates for content-rich curriculum and emphasizes the importance of background knowledge in literacy development.

PBS Learning Media, in collaboration with Nebraska Public Media, offers a collection of standards-aligned ELA resources for students across all grades.

ReadWriteThink Collection features curated lesson plans, teaching materials, and professional learning resources on topics frequently taught in ELA classrooms.

The National Council of Teachers of English’s 2018 position statement is organized into three sections that outline what research reveals about writing and effective writing instruction.

Updated December 15, 2025 1:12pm