Beyond Magic: Fostering Literacy Resilience in Diverse Classrooms through Home-Based Approaches
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Resilience
2.2. Resilience Pedagogy
2.3. Literacy Resilience
2.4. Family Literacy
- (1)
- What are the educational perceptions of Hebrew teachers in elementary school regarding nurturing literacy resilience and integrating home literacy in language lessons in the classroom?
- (2)
- What are the challenges and coping methods adopted by Hebrew teachers in elementary school to nurture literacy resilience and integrate home literacy in language lessons in the classroom?
3. Methodology
Research Method
4. Findings
4.1. Perceptions
4.1.1. Literacy Resilience Is a Tool for Life
Literacy resilience means resilience, mainly being independent in learning, and dealing with various difficulties and challenges in their learning process even if these are skills they do not necessarily know, and from their knowledge, they know how to compensate for the difficulty, now, during the lesson and in life in general. We invest many resources in developing language skills and nurturing resilience, providing diverse opportunities for developing literacy skills.(Teacher S)
Literacy resilience is the student’s ability to deal with language difficulties in real time even when there are unfamiliar elements. That means not panicking from uncertainty, to contain, to deal with these difficulties. He doesn’t let the difficulty of any kind manage him, but he manages the difficulty. Children with literacy resilience are active in class, independent and not afraid to make mistakes. These are tools for life.(Teacher T)
4.1.2. Home Literacy Has an Important Contribution to Nurturing Literacy Resilience
The main literacy resilience should also come from home, from the parents. It’s important to emphasize language at home from a very young age, like reading books, it’s a slow, long and prolonged process. Parents who know how to push and encourage, see the literacy development of the child. There are many students I see whose parents themselves do not know Hebrew well, and can’t help, and then the student progresses more slowly. I can’t take responsibility for the parents too.(Teacher B)
Parents need to be involved, in working with children on topics we learned in class. Parents who speak with a high vocabulary, enrich the language in speech, reading, and writing, are interested in what the child is learning, encourage them to continue practicing at home, and strengthen literacy.(Teacher N)
4.2. Challenges and Coping Strategies
4.2.1. The Challenge—Teaching in a Heterogeneous Classroom
One of the challenges in language lessons is reading acquisition in a class where each student is at a different level. Each student has their difficulty, and for each student, you need to adopt the appropriate method to acquire the language. It’s not always possible, there’s no time, many tasks and requirements, no help. I’m not a magician.(Teacher S)
Teaching in the classroom is very complex, the teacher is expected to adapt to each of the students, so that everyone receives help, feels success, and progress. No one feels frustrated, there are a lot of emotional aspects here, and we can’t settle for our limited hours in full classes to advance them.(Teacher T)
In principle, I deal with diversity and heterogeneity in teaching methods; I try to adapt a learning method for each child even if it’s different from the usual. I do not see it as a difficulty. First, the child feels a sense of enjoyment, and the material sits well in memory—cards, pictures for illustration, and games.(Teacher D)
There are 32 children in the class, and we need to adjust for everyone. Everyone is involved, and everyone is truly active and feels confident to take part in the lesson despite the different levels. I work in small groups, some next to me, some in the space. A lot and regular individual meetings that strengthen the children also emotionally.(Teacher A)
4.2.2. The Challenge—Encouraging Parental Involvement
Parents need to understand that children are in the process of reading acquisition and that it needs to be done and worked on. I give homework assignments many times, and the children who do them are those whose parents are more involved, and therefore they progress more.(Teacher A)
Parents do not always understand how important it is to read and practice. One way is to give assignments that also involve the home and involve the family. Like research tasks that require parental cooperation, students ask their parents about the family. In this way, we can also present the home inside the classroom and strengthen the connection.(Teacher T)
Family literacy and parental involvement in children’s reading and writing have an emotional impact and strengthen the child’s confidence. Collaboration between parents and child is enjoyable and increases motivation to delve into the content itself and understand it better. I opened a WhatsApp group for parents; I uploaded instructional videos with my explanations, and parents asked questions and shared ideas.(Teacher R)
4.3. The Challenge—Cultivating an Independent Learner
Teaching children at home and in the classroom to be independent, they can perform reading comprehension tasks on their own from start to finish. Explaining to them that I do not immediately approach to answer them when they ask, because it’s important that they will try on their own. To reduce my mediation to a minimum according to the student’s level. Some children do not believe they are capable; they sit and wait for me.(Teacher N)
I teach in plenary and give independent practice on the task. Not everyone is capable; some do not have learning habits to sit, read, try, or make an effort. There’s no motivation and desire to succeed, even when the task is close to their world, or they choose themselves. They are used to coming to the teacher and getting answers. This is not the way.(Teacher A)
It’s important to allow them to work together, think together, and explore. This mainly helps students who wouldn’t do anything alone, and it strengthens their confidence. I hear them talking, raising ideas, helping and explaining to each other, and less turning to me. Slowly friendships are formed, and they are more open.(Teacher B)
I see the gaps between the children; the personal conversation allows me to get to know the students to adapt the learning and support to them.(Teacher T)
It’s important to set personal conversations, establish a personal connection with the students, and learn what interests or bothers them. To tell them that I’m here to help and explain what I expect in terms of their behavior in class and how they deal with tasks.(Teacher D)
5. Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Eliyahu-Levi, D. Beyond Magic: Fostering Literacy Resilience in Diverse Classrooms through Home-Based Approaches. Behav. Sci. 2024, 14, 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14090834
Eliyahu-Levi D. Beyond Magic: Fostering Literacy Resilience in Diverse Classrooms through Home-Based Approaches. Behavioral Sciences. 2024; 14(9):834. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14090834
Chicago/Turabian StyleEliyahu-Levi, Dolly. 2024. "Beyond Magic: Fostering Literacy Resilience in Diverse Classrooms through Home-Based Approaches" Behavioral Sciences 14, no. 9: 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14090834
APA StyleEliyahu-Levi, D. (2024). Beyond Magic: Fostering Literacy Resilience in Diverse Classrooms through Home-Based Approaches. Behavioral Sciences, 14(9), 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14090834