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UTC Careers
University Career Opportunities in Reading Recovery
The Reading Recovery Trainer
Trainers are faculty members working at university based centers
for training Reading Recovery teacher leaders. University trainers
have broad responsibilities that include the following:
- training teacher leaders in their yearlong full-time post-masters
graduate study,
- collaborating with other faculty members and schools toward
comprehensive school reform through early literacy initiatives,
- providing leadership for Reading Recovery at the local, state,
national, and international levels,
- implementing, developing, and expanding Reading Recovery,
- conducting research and program evaluation, and
- directing a Reading Recovery university training center.
Yearlong Study to Become a University Trainer
Becoming a Reading Recovery university trainer requires a yearlong
post-doctoral residency program. In the United States, the residency
program is offered at The Ohio State University or Texas Woman’s
University. Tuition and expenses to become a university trainer are
typically paid by universities seeking Reading Recovery-trained
faculty. The Web site for the Reading Recovery Council of North
America (www.readingrecovery.org) lists postings of Reading Recovery
trainer positions available. The graduate course work includes
intensive study on a wide range of literacy theories and research:
- emerging literacy,
- theories of literacy processing,
- literacy assessment,
- oral language development,
- reading comprehension,
- written language development,
- phonological awareness and orthographic development,
- theories of teaching and learning, including cultural influences,
- prevention and early intervention,
- learning disabilities, and
- English language development.
In addition to the course work, becoming a university trainer
includes clinical and field experience with emphasis on the
following:
- teaching four Reading Recovery students,
- connecting theory and instructional procedures,
- systematic observation of students’ reading and writing behaviors,
- working with adult learners to increase understandings and foster
change,
- establishing and maintaining quality Reading Recovery teacher
training sites,
- advocacy and communication,
- collecting and analyzing data on Reading Recovery program
implementation,
- writing and disseminating reports of data, and
- leadership skills, including work as an instructional leader and
change agent.
Teacher Education and Staff Development in Reading Recovery
Reading Recovery is widely known for the high quality of
professional development it provides at all levels. University
trainers provide dynamic leadership for training teacher leaders and
overseeing teacher education in Reading Recovery.
Reading Recovery makes extensive use of a one-way mirror through
which teachers or teacher leaders observe colleagues working with
children. Participants put their observations and analyses into
words, and through this process they sharpen their observational
powers and build new understandings to inform teaching decisions.
All Reading Recovery professionals teach children as part of their
professional requirements. This includes university trainers,
teacher leaders, and teachers.
A three-tiered model of staff development is key to Reading
Recovery’s success. University trainers provide professional
development for teacher leaders, then teacher leaders provide
professional development for Reading Recovery teachers.
The course content for teacher leaders focuses on five content
areas.
- Teaching children. Teacher leaders engage in diagnostic teaching
of individual children, working with multiple cases for a range of
experiences. They learn procedures especially designed for working
with children selected for Reading Recovery while connecting their
practice to theoretical understandings.
- Teaching teachers. Teacher leaders learn how to provide the
initial and ongoing training experiences for Reading Recovery
teachers. University trainers work alongside teacher leader trainees
through guided on-site experiences. Special attention is given to
the many aspects of working with adult learners.
- Implementation in Reading Recovery. Teacher leaders develop
problem-solving skills and learn how to identify and address
challenges to implementation. They learn how to create awareness,
work collaboratively with stakeholders, and cultivate support for
implementing Reading Recovery at the school, district, site, and
state levels.
- Literacy theories and research. Teacher leaders examine the
theoretical foundations underlying oral language development,
aspects of reading and writing processes, and theories of teaching
and learning.
- Issues in literacy difficulties. Teacher leaders examine the
concept of prevention rather than remediation as a response to
individual differences in literacy learning. In addition, teacher
leaders investigate issues that have arisen in the field of literacy
difficulties.
The course content for Reading Recovery teachers focuses on teaching
children and includes:
- careful observation and recording of children’s reading and
writing behaviors to build a theory of the reading and writing
processes,
Three Tiers for Reading Recovery Teacher Education and Staff
Development
- University Trainers at the University Training Center Level
In university training centers, university trainers train teacher
leaders, provide ongoing professional development, offer technical
assistance to Reading Recovery sites, and work with children.
- Teacher Leaders at the Teacher Training Site Level
At the school district or training site level, teacher leaders work
with children and train teachers. More than 500 training sites
operate in the United States.
- Teachers at the School Level
At the school level, Reading Recovery students receive individual
lessons from a specially trained Reading Recovery teacher. More than
10,000 elementary schools in the United States have implemented
Reading Recovery. Reading Recovery operates in 20% of public
elementary schools with first grades and is spread across 49 states.
- learning a set of procedures that have been shown to be effective
in helping struggling young readers,
- making teaching decisions about use of the procedures based on
observation and analysis,
- learning about how to implement Reading Recovery in their schools,
and
- collecting required data for monitoring and evaluation.
University trainers and teacher leaders also receive practical
experience and theoretical grounding in how adults learn. This
understanding is key to why Reading Recovery is an effective teacher
training program.
Theory and Practice Integrated in Reading Recovery
Reading Recovery offers a unique opportunity for academics who
believe that educational theory should be grounded in practice. This
tradition is rooted in Reading Recovery’s earliest development by
educational researcher and child psychologist Marie Clay. Dr. Clay
observed children’s behavior and identified how successful readers
and writers work. Children who have difficulty with literacy
learning have diverse and interacting deficits and strengths.
Building on a child’s strengths, Reading Recovery designs individual
instruction to accelerate learning. University trainers have unique
opportunities to examine the relationship between theory and
practice as they teach beginning readers and teach Reading Recovery
teacher leaders at the university level.
University trainers work closely with schools and other
university-based training programs. This school-university
partnership benefits both the university and the school by assuring
that lowest performing students have expert teachers and that
university students have continuing practical experience in schools.
Collaboration also provides opportunities to work toward
comprehensive school reform through implementation of Reading
Recovery within the framework of a comprehensive literacy approach.
Research Opportunities in Reading Recovery
University trainers guide research that is essential to Reading
Recovery’s success with the children it serves. Trainers conduct
research in areas related to early literacy acquisition, teacher
education, professional development, and systems innovation in
schools. Specific research topics have included adoption and
implementation of Reading Recovery, metacognition in young readers,
achievement motivation and attribution theory, coaching in teacher
education, and phonemic awareness in Reading Recovery students.
Trainers design their research both individually and
collaboratively, with faculty members or with university trainers at
other centers.
The extensive program evaluation design that is built into Reading
Recovery offers additional opportunities for research. Reading
Recovery teachers, teacher leaders, and administrators at every site
systematically collect and report data on every child served to the
National Data Evaluation Center located at The Ohio State
University. Since Reading Recovery’s beginning in the United States
in 1984, participating schools have collected data on every child
served by Reading Recovery and reported results for a national
database. This national database of more than one million children
has informed Reading Recovery research, made Reading Recovery
accountable for its outcomes to schools and funding sources, and
informed teaching and implementation decisions.
A Network of Literacy Scholars
Reading Recovery’s university trainers are part of an organized
national and international network of literacy scholars. In North
America, university trainers meet twice annually with other members
of the North American Trainers Group (NATG). The group provides
leadership to Reading Recovery in North America and provides
high-quality continuous learning for Reading Recovery educators.
Professional development at NATG meetings has included scholars such
as Marie Clay, David Wood, Anthony Bryk, and Andy Hargreaves.
In addition to the NATG sessions, university trainers meet twice
during a three-year period with members of the International Reading
Recovery Trainers Organization. This organization, whose membership
includes all university trainers from the five countries where
teacher leaders are trained, provides leadership and high-quality,
continuous learning for Reading Recovery educators. Outside formal
meeting times, an active Internet list serve and regular conference
schedule offer valuable opportunities to network with other Reading
Recovery literacy scholars. Trainers often travel to other states
and regions to consult with Reading Recovery sites in other
communities.
Trainers also take advantage of the network of scholars at their
individual institutions by serving on faculty committees, teaching
courses outside the Reading Recovery arena, and conducting
collaborative research. This networking further assists the trainer
in expanding the professional network of peers and colleagues.
Leadership Opportunities
One of the key roles of a university trainer is to inform policy
makers, the public, and the university community about Reading
Recovery and how it helps both children and schools. The university
trainer oversees reporting for states and regions and works with the
National Data Evaluation Center to create reports that inform
decision making. University trainers also meet with elected
officials to provide information and discuss the need for supportive
legislation and funding.
In addition, trainers can participate with schools, districts, and
states to enhance the overall effort to reform schools through
comprehensive school reform. Reading Recovery operates as the
first-grade safety net in a school’s comprehensive literacy program.
Reading Recovery
Reading Recovery is a highly effective short-term intervention of
one-to-one tutoring for low achieving first graders. The
intervention is most effective when it is available to all students
who need it and is used as a supplement to good classroom teaching.
Individual students receive a half-hour lesson each school day for
12 to 20 weeks with a specially trained Reading Recovery teacher. As
soon as students can read within the average range of their
classroom and demonstrate that they can continue to achieve, their
lessons are discontinued, and new students begin instruction.
There are two positive outcomes for Reading Recovery students:
- Over 17 years of Reading Recovery in North America, 81% of those
students who completed the full 12- to 20-week series of lessons and
59% of all Reading Recovery students were able to demonstrate
achievement within the average performance band of their class.
Follow-up studies indicate that most Reading Recovery students also
did well on norm-referenced tests and continued to maintain their
gains in later years.
- The few students who are still having difficulty after a full
series of lessons are referred for further evaluation. They may be
candidates for longer-term programs.
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