|
includes/content/subnav.asp NOINDEX
|
Reading Recovery is
Based on Scientific
Research (SBRR)
Reading Recovery is Based on Scientific Research (SBRR)
In March 2007, the
What Works Clearinghouse (WWC), a branch of the
U.S. Department of Education (USDE) and the Institute of Education
Sciences (IES), released its independent review of the experimental
research on Reading Recovery. The review clearly establishes that
Reading Recovery is an effective intervention based on scientific
research.
The reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)
emphasized scientifically based reading research (SBRR) when
selecting reading programs and interventions. While researchers and
scholars may differ on their definitions of “science” and
“scientifically based research,” the Institute of Education Sciences
in the United States Department of
Education (USDE) provided several criteria to be used when selecting
effective reading programs and interventions. Reading Recovery meets
all of these criteria.
Employs systematic, empirical methods that draw on
observation or experiment
The structure and design of Reading Recovery are consistent with
a large body of research on how children learn to read and write. In
addition to basic research on the reading and writing of young
children (Clay, 1966), a series of studies in the 1970s led to the
development of Reading Recovery (including field trials, follow-up
studies, replication studies, monitoring studies, and subgroup
studies). Numerous studies have examined the effectiveness of
Reading Recovery for children with literacy difficulties.
Reading Recovery evaluation uses systematic, empirical methods to
collect data annually on all children served by the intervention.
Data collection, analysis, and assessment are standardized
nationally. Data are also collected on a random sample of
grade-level peers to provide a comparison group. See www.ndec.us for
information about evaluation methodology.
Involves rigorous data analyses that are adequate to test
stated hypotheses
The goal of Reading Recovery and Descubriendo la Lectura1 is to
dramatically reduce the number of learners who have extreme
difficulty with literacy learning and the cost of these learners to
educational systems. This goal calls for Reading Recovery children
to make faster-than-average progress so they can work within an
average group setting in the regular classroom.
Hypotheses that are tested annually include the following:
- Reading Recovery children will increase their skills in the
following areas necessary for reading: letter identification,
reading vocabulary, concepts about print, writing vocabulary,
hearing and recording sounds (phonemic awareness and letter-sound
relationships), and text reading.
- Children who successfully complete Reading Recovery will perform
on literacy measures within average grade-level expectations.
- Children who successfully complete Reading Recovery will continue
to make gains in text reading and writing after the intervention and
continue to perform competitively with peers who were not initially
at risk.
Annual data analyses test these hypotheses and reveal that a large
majority of children with complete interventions make accelerated
progress and meet average grade-level expectations; they also
continue to make progress after the intervention. Because these
children were the lowest literacy achievers in the first grade in
their schools, we can verify the reduction of the number of children
with extreme literacy difficulties.
Rigorous data analysis procedures are carefully implemented by the
National Data Evaluation Center (NDEC) which collects data on all
children served and provides annual reports of quantitative data.
Research questions were developed to guide data analysis and to test
Reading Recovery’s effectiveness and efficiency. Analyses include
information about
- the children served,
- the outcome status of each child,
- progress of all children on multiple literacy measures,
- comparison of Reading Recovery children with a random sample of
their peers,
- classroom teacher perspectives of children’s literacy performance,
- information about retention and special education,
- analysis of time in program,
- and much more.
In addition to the publication of an annual national report (see
www.ndec.us), school, district, and site reports are also available
each year.
Relies on measurements or observational methods that provide
valid data across evaluators and observers and across multiple
measurements and observations
Reading Recovery uses systematic and simultaneous replication
studies (Frymier, Barber, Gansneder, & Robertson, 1989) to document
program outcomes for all children served—adhering to standardized
methods, instruments, and timelines across all schools, school
districts, training sites, and states. Replication is important
because it provides evidence of accountability that is open to
researchers and administrators. Assessments in Reading Recovery have
been replicated for more than 1.7 million children across time and
location with remarkable consistency.
An Observation Survey of Early Literacy Achievement (Clay, 2002,
2006) is used to measure gains across multiple measurements. This
instrument has established validity and reliability (Clay, 2002,
2006; Denton, Ciancio, & Fletcher, 2006). National norms are
available for the six tasks of the Observation Survey
(Gómez-Bellengé & Thompson, 2005).
Data collected from multiple observers and evaluators include the
following:
- Pre- and post-intervention assessments (student outcomes);
follow-up assessment at end of year
- Pre- and post-assessment for a random sample of children in the
grade-level cohort (to create national norms)
- Reported perceptions of classroom performance of individual
children by classroom teachers
- Decisions related to special education referral and placement and
retention in grade level, using data and input from non-Reading
Recovery school personnel
- Reported perceptions of program effectiveness from parents,
administrators, and classroom teachers (optional but recommended)
Has been accepted by a peer-reviewed journal or approved by a
panel of independent experts through a comparably rigorous,
objective, and scientific review
Support for various aspects of the Reading Recovery intervention is
published in numerous peer-reviewed articles and research reviews.
More than 40 peer-reviewed research publications are summarized in
Chapter 10 of Changing Futures: The Influence of Reading Recovery in
the United States (Schmitt et al., 2005). An important independent
evaluation of Reading Recovery used specific meta-analytic
procedures to study overall effects of Reading Recovery and found
positive program effects (D’Agostino & Murphy, 2004).
References
Clay, M. M. (1966). Emergent reading behavior. Unpublished
doctoral dissertation. University of Auckland Library, Auckland, NZ.
Clay, M. M. (2002, 2006). An observation survey of early literacy
achievement. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
D’Agostino, J. V., & Murphy, J. A. (2004). A meta-analysis of
Reading Recovery in United States schools. Educational Evaluation
and Policy Analysis, 26(1), 23–38.
Denton, C. A., Ciancio, D., & Fletcher, J. (2006). Validity,
reliability, and utility of the observation survey of early literacy
achievement. Reading Research Quarterly, 41, 8–34.
Frymier, J., Barber, L., Gansneder, B., & Robertson, N. (1989).
Simultaneous replication: A technique for large-scale research. Phi
Delta Kappan, 71, 228–231.
Gómez-Bellengé, F. X., & Thompson, J. R. (2005). U.S. norms for
tasks of an observation survey of early literacy achievement.
(Technical report). Columbus, OH: The National Data Evaluation
Center. (www.ndec.us)
Schmitt, M. C., Askew, B. J., Fountas, I. C., Lyons, C. A., &
Pinnell, G. S. (2005). Changing futures: The influence of Reading
Recovery in the United States. Worthington, OH: Reading Recovery
Council of North America.
____________________
1
Descubriendo la Lectura, Reading Recovery in Spanish, is available
for first-grade children whose classroom literacy instruction is in
Spanish.
|