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Reducing Retention and
Learning Disability Placement
Through Reading Recovery:
An Educationally Sound Cost-
Effective Choice
Reducing Retention and Learning Disability Placement Through
Reading Recovery: An Educationally Sound Cost-Effective Choice
C.A. Lyons & J. Beaver. (1995). In R. Allington & S. Walmsley
(Eds.), No Quick Fix: Rethinking Literacy Programs in
America's Elementary Schools (pp. 116-136). New York: Teachers
College Press and the International Reading Association.
Background
Lyons and Beaver conducted a cost comparison analysis for
first-grade retention in Lancaster, Ohio four years after Reading
Recovery was implemented systemwide.
Findings
The study revealed that the first-grade retention rate had dropped
from 4.3% (76 of 1,772 students) in the 3 years prior to
implementation of Reading Recovery to 2.9% (63 of 2,123 students) 4
years after systemwide implementation. Using teachers' salaries and
students' time in the program, these figures represented a cost
savings of $163,020. In addition, the Lancaster district looked at
special education placements. In the 3 years prior to full
implementation of Reading Recovery, 32 students were placed in
learning disabilities classrooms at the end of Grade 1 or during the
first few months of Grade 2. In the 3 years after Reading Recovery
implementation, 10 children were classified as learning disabled.
The cost of educating one learning disabled student at the time was
conservatively estimated at $9,100 across 4 years of service
compared with the per pupil cost of $1,708 for Reading Recovery. The
authors found that considerable savings were realized after the
district established Reading Recovery as a prevention program.
This abstract was first printed in What
Evidence Says About Reading Recovery (2002). Columbus, OH:
Reading Recovery Council of North America.
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