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Reading Recovery: Helping
At-Risk Children Learn to Read
Reading Recovery: Helping At-Risk Children Learn to Read
G.S. Pinnell. (1989). The Elementary School Journal, 90,
161-183.
Background
Pinnell evaluated two cohorts of students. The purposes of the study
were to explore whether Reading Recovery could succeed with
low-achieving children and to determine whether those children
maintained their gains. The lowest-achieving children were randomly
assigned either to Reading Recovery or to a control group served
daily in individual lessons taught by a trained paraprofessional
(not a Reading Recovery teacher). Both groups were compared with a
random sample of average and high progress first graders as an
indication of average progress. The study used all six tasks of
Clay's Diagnostic Survey, a writing sample, and the Comprehensive
Test of Basic Skills (two subtests).
Findings
Pinnell found that in the full Reading Recovery program, Reading
Recovery children scored significantly better than control children
on seven of the nine diagnostic measures at the end of first grade.
They compared well with the random sample group. Reading Recovery
children were followed in second and third grade to determine their
performance in text reading in subsequent years. Reading Recovery
children remained superior in comparison with the control group.
For more information see Six Reading Recovery Studies: Meeting
the Criteria for Scientifically Based Research. (PDF Version)
This abstract first appeared in What Evidence Says
About Reading Recovery (2002). Columbus, OH: Reading Recovery
Council of North America.
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