Current Issue
Our state of Indiana has been celebrating growth in reading assessment scores and third grade students reading proficiency rates, as well we should be. This is indeed a time to recognize the hard work that teachers, instructional coaches, and state support personnel have been investing in refining literacy instruction to be more aligned with the Science of Reading. However, literacy researchers have raised the alarm that Science of Reading mandates can be misapplied or misunderstood in ways that can hinder students’ development as readers and writers (Tierney & Pearson, 2024). Our issue helps us consider not just the growth in word recognition that readers must make to become literate individuals, but also the other areas that impact reading and writing growth not mentioned or as easily enforced in curriculums. These include areas that impact language development and knowledge building, as well as motivations of readers and writers through their sense of identity and affiliation with literacy.
Full Issue
- Requires Subscription Full Issue
- Requires Subscription Building Readers and Writers for the 21st Century: Identity, Knowledge and Digital Literacy by Ben Boche and Sharon Pratt
- Requires Subscription Can We Talk? Teacher Booktalks as an Influence on Intermediate Readers’ Choice Reading Selections by Steven L. Layne
- Requires Subscription 2025 Indiana Science Trade Book Annual Reading List (IN-STAR): Teaching Science Through Literature by Jeff Thomas, Kristin Rearden, Simone Nance, and Elizabeth Wilkins
- Requires Subscription What a Doll: Contextualizing Artifacts of Play Through Storytelling & in the Classroom by Christina L. Romero, Jennifer McNeany, and Faith Bliss
- Requires Subscription Teaching with AI, Not for AI: Equity, Identity, & Authorship in Literacy by Tayler Pawlak and Jordan Pridemore
- Requires Subscription Helicopter Holding Her Own: The Exceptional Life of Jackie Orms - Book Review by William P. Bintz
The Indiana Literacy Journal is the peer-reviewed, open-access journal of the Indiana State Literacy Association, which is composed of and serves classroom teachers, literacy specialists, educational leaders, teacher educators, and university faculty. The journal publishes on diverse topics related to literacy, including reading, writing, speaking, listening, viewing, visually representing, technology, and literature for children and young adults. Our editorial review board, readership, and authorship are nationally representative. All published content is available at no cost. Copyright remains with the author(s).