Why it matters
Motivation is more than a “nice to have”—it’s foundational to adolescent literacy success. Students who are motivated read more, comprehend more deeply, and develop stronger self-efficacy. Yet many adolescents experience declining interest in reading due to limited autonomy, irrelevant texts, or past reading struggles.
What works best? Multi-component interventions
Research shows the most effective literacy instruction integrates cognitive strategy instruction (e.g., summarizing, predicting) with motivational supports (e.g., choice, goal-setting, collaboration).
This combination leads to improved:
- Reading comprehension
- Student engagement
- Self-efficacy and confidence
Practical teaching tips: Integrating motivation into literacy
| Literacy focus | Motivation strategy |
| Teach summarizing or questioning strategies | Let students choose texts that interest them |
| Target comprehension or vocabulary | Use goal-setting and self-monitoring checklists |
| Focus on fluency or decoding | Celebrate growth; reinforce effort over ability |
| Deepen discussion | Use literature circles or peer collaboration |
Tailoring for diverse learners
- Students with or at risk for disabilities: Embed explicit instruction in decoding, fluency, and vocabulary with motivational supports like attribution retraining (e.g., praising effort and strategy use).
- Typically achieving students: Use Tier 1 tools like Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction (CORI) to enhance intrinsic motivation, self-efficacy, and comprehension.
- English learners (ELs): Combine background knowledge activation and questioning strategies with culturally relevant texts and collaborative discussion.
Design for long-term impact
- Sustain motivation supports over time: Short-term boosts fade. Embed supports across the year.
- Make it systemic: Choose curricula that combine literacy strategy instruction with autonomy, relevance, and student voice.
- Promote peer collaboration: Book clubs, inquiry projects, and shared discussions deepen learning and motivation.
The takeaway
Motivation is not separate from instruction—it’s how instruction “sticks.” Let’s create classrooms where adolescents not only learn to read well—but want to read more.
The information provided in this summary is based on findings from Instructional Interventions or Practices to Support Adolescent Motivation and Engagement in Literacy Learning: A Systematic Review.