Resisting and Persisting: Identity Stability Among Adolescent Readers Labeled as Struggling Journal Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • This phenomenological case study explores the persistence of high school readers labeled as struggling as they described their responses to recurring, consistent, externally originating challenges to positive reading identities growing from their experiences in a Young Adult Literature (YAL) course. Through application of Weinreich’s identity theory, the article examines three challenges that emerged: the home environment, friend influence, and school norms and practices. Findings drawn from student-generated oral reflections gathered through Seidman’s interview protocol suggest that participants possessed the power to dissociate from perceived negative reading identities and enact agency over identities that conflicted with their desired reading identities. However, participants were particularly vulnerable to the influence of school-ascribed reading identities they defined as negative. Given the perceived validity of these ascribed labels, readers were challenged more significantly in their attempts to persist in the self-construal of their desired identity conceptions in response to in-school, rather than out-of-school, challenges.

publication date

  • May 1, 2018

has restriction

  • closed

Date in CU Experts

  • December 14, 2018 11:20 AM

Full Author List

  • Glenn W; Ginsberg R; King-Watkins D

author count

  • 3

Other Profiles

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0743-5584

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1552-6895

Additional Document Info

start page

  • 306

end page

  • 331

volume

  • 33

issue

  • 3