Shifting the discourse from a focus on academic language to the more dynamic but less researched construct of academic literacies, this volume addresses three key questions:
• What constitutes academic literacy?
• What does academic literacy development in adolescent multilingual students look like and how can this development be assessed?
• What classroom contexts foster the development of academic literacies in multilingual adolescents?
The contributing authors provide divergent definitions of academic literacies and use dissimilar theoretical and methodological approaches to study literacy development. Nevertheless, all
chapters reflect a shared conceptual framework for examining academic literacies as situated, overlapping, meaning-marking practices. This framework foregrounds students’ participation in
valued disciplinary literacy practices. Emphasized in the new college and career readiness standards, the notion of disciplinary practices allows the contributing authors to bridge the
language/content dichotomy, and take a more holistic as well as nuanced view of the demands that multilingual students face in general education classrooms. The volume also explores the
implications of the emphasis on academic literacy practices for classroom instruction, research, and policy.