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The authors define reading engagement asthe mutual support of motivations, trategies, and conceptual knowledge during reading. To increase reading engagement, a collaborative t am designed ayear-long integration of reading/language arts and science instruction (Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction, CORI). The authors compared students who received this instruction to similar students who received traditionally organized instruction aimed toward the same objectives. A path analysis howed that CORI had a positive effect on strategy use and text comprehension for students at Grades 3 and 5 when accounting for past achievement and prior knowledge. CORI also had a positive, indirect effect on conceptual knowledge mediated by strategy use, and this instruction facilitated conceptual transfer indirectly through several paths simultaneously. The findings are discussed in relation to a growing literature on instructional contexts for motivated strategy use and conceptual learning from text. The term engagement i reading refers to the motivated use of strategies and conceptual knowledge during reading. These processes operate dynamically, increasing over time.
Guthrie et al. (Mon,) studied this question.