Issue Papers
The red links below lead to web pages and issue papers on the
identified topics.
Essential
Components
In 2000, the National Reading Panel published a list of five
essential components of reading instruction which were incorporated
into the No Child Left Behind legislation. Reading Recovery
incorporates these five elements into daily lessons and adds four
elements supported by the research literature. Read more about how
Reading Recovery aligns with the five elements of the National
Reading Panel report.
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Phonemic Awareness
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Phonics
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Vocabulary
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Fluency
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Comprehension
Scientifically Based Reading Research
(SBRR)
Reading Recovery meets the definition of scientific research
published by the Institute of Education Sciences of the United
States Department of Education (USDE).
IDEA
Reading Recovery can play an important role in a school’s
implementation of the 2004 Individuals with Disabilities Education
Improvement Act (IDEIA; IDEA). The revised IDEA legislation allows
the use of response to intervention (RTI) as an alternate method for
identifying children with learning disabilities. IDEA 2004 also
permits local agencies to use funds for early intervening services (EIS).
One-to-One Instruction
In these times of tight funding and increased demand for
academic results, educators increasingly turn to research to
discover best practices for student achievement. A continuing
question in the field of beginning reading is whether small-group
instruction can be as effective as one-to-one in preventing reading
failure. This paper reviews research on this question and focuses
specifically on Reading Recovery, a beginning reading intervention
that relies exclusively on individualized one-to-one instruction for
success. Scientific evidence indicates that
individualized instruction is more effective than small-group
instruction.
Learning Disabilities
A 1995 International Reading Association publication identified
Reading Recovery as an intervention that not only teaches
children how to read but also reduces the number of students who are
labeled learning disabled (LD) and the number of students who are
placed in remedial reading programs.
Reading Recovery can play an important role in a school’s
implementation of the 2004 Individuals with Disabilities Education
Improvement Act (IDEIA, IDEA). It is a compelling option for schools
that are designing response to intervention (RTI) models to meet the
needs of struggling readers and writers.
For information about how Reading Recovery fits into an RTI
model, see “Reading
Recovery and IDEA Legislation: Early Intervening Services (EIS)
and Response to Intervention (RTI).”
English Language Learners
Reading Recovery serves approximately 16,000 English language
learners (ELLs) in the United States each year, about 15% of all
Reading Recovery students. An investment in both
Descubriendo la Lectura (the
Spanish reconstruction of Reading Recovery) and Reading Recovery
ensures commitment to all children, including those who enter school
speaking a language other than English.
Closing the Gap
With the growing diversity in America’s population, the
achievement gap among various groups of children is gaining national
attention.
Reading Recovery reduces and in some cases closes the achievement
gap between low and average achievers, English language learners
(ELLs) and native English speakers, lower- and higher-family income,
and various racial and ethnic groups.
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