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A Collaborative Mission: Literacy Opportunities for All Children
 

Bringing all children to literacy in the first years of schooling will not be an easy task. It will require collaboration among professional educators about good classroom teaching and about safety nets for children who need additional literacy support. Reading Recovery professionals want to work with colleagues who are acting in the interests of children.

The safety net known as Reading Recovery represents a partnership -- a concentrated, continuous, united effort in which teachers, administrators, parents, and policy makers work together to change the status of low-achieving children in literacy. In an ongoing process of educational redesign, Reading Recovery partners will continue to evaluate the program by collecting data on every child served and to analyze program strengths and make recommendations for improvement.

In his book on redesigning education, Nobel Prize-winning physicist and educational reformer Kenneth G. Wilson uses Reading Recovery as a model for the process. He comments: "Reading Recovery offers United States education its first real demonstration of the power of a process combining research, development (including ongoing teacher education), marketing, and technical support in an orchestrated system of change."89 He suggests that in three ways, Reading Recovery can encourage the process of educational redesign.
  1. It proves that a well-designed educational program can be replicated among teachers and schools across a wide array of locations and cultures and still yield uniformly superior results.
  2. It indicates that investing money and effort in educational design can earn dramatic rewards -- if it's made in a properly researched and designed program that offers thorough teacher training and support.
  3. It shows that when educators find a program that meets these two criteria and proves that it can earn a good result, schools are willing to make its adoption a budget priority.

Reading Recovery is the best evidence yet of the direct link between good design and educational excellence.90

All educators acknowledge that change is hard work. Anything that tackles the complex problems of today's literacy education is going to be difficult. It means that the educational community must work together to solve problems in a constructive way, collaborating across groups and with all stakeholders to build broad ownership in a shared goal -- literacy opportunities for all children. Reading Recovery professionals welcome the challenge to make these literacy opportunities a reality by building partnerships with all who share this goal.