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Self-Perceptions of At-
Risk and High Achieving
Readers: Beyond Reading
Recovery Achievement
Data
Self-Perceptions of At-Risk and High Achieving Readers: Beyond
Reading Recovery Achievement Data
S.G. Cohen, G. McDonnell, & B. Osborn. (1989). In S. McCormick & J.
Zutell (Eds.), Cognitive and Social Perspectives for Literacy
Research and Instruction: Thirty Eighth Yearbook of the National
Reading Conference. (pp. 117-122). Chicago, IL: National Reading
Conference.
Background
Cohen, McDonnell, and Osborn studied the impact of Reading Recovery
on students' beliefs regarding their competence and capacity to
direct their own learning activities. They used causal attribution
(Weiner, 1972) and self-efficacy (Bandura, 1977) to support the
theoretical framework. Participants included 138 first graders
divided among the following groups: 50 were in Reading Recovery, 48
were in remedial reading groups of five or six students each, and 40
were randomly selected from their higher-achieving classmates. After
the interventions, children were tested on two scales to measure
attributions and self-efficacy.
Findings
Results demonstrated that successful Reading Recovery children had
profiles similar to high-achieving students, and they more readily
attributed their success in school to ability, effort, and mood than
did the students in the remedial groups. The Reading Recovery
students also judged themselves to be more competent on
school-related tasks (self-efficacy) than the other low-achieving
students.
Comments
These results support the notion that children have positive
self-esteem when they leave Reading Recovery.
This abstract first appeared in What Evidence Says
About Reading Recovery. (2002). Columbus, OH: Reading Recovery
Council of North America.
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