“…Researchers have concluded that teachers exhibit different listening orientations, or ways in which they are positioned to listen to students (Coles, 2002; Davis, 1997), including teachers of gifted readers (Gilson & Little, 2016). These findings suggest that teachers of gifted readers could intentionally differentiate their listening (Worthington & Fitch-Hauser, 2012) during discourse based on the needs of the learners; however, further research is necessary to understand how it might affect student achievement and participation during classroom discourse (Gilson & Little, 2016). Surprisingly, although the intersection of teacher listening and discourse has been explored in the mathematics education literature over numerous decades (e.g., Coles, 2002; Davis, 1997; Empson & Jacobs, 2008; Lim et al, 2020; Mhlolo & Schäfer, 2012), it has received a paucity of research attention from the literacy and gifted education fields, with a few exceptions (Boyd & Markarian, 2011; Gilson & Little, 2016; Sangster & Anderson, 2009).…”