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Response to Investors' Business Daily Editorial
Letter from David Moriarty
April 6,1999
Editor
Investor's Business Daily
Referring to your editorial "When Education Theories Go Bad," I am
the first to admit, as an educator, that I have much to learn from
the private sector. But according to your misinformed editorial on
Reading Recovery, you have much to learn from the field of
education. The Reading Recovery you describe, I never heard of, so
where did you uncover your facts?
Reading Recovery is "hot" in the United States - no question. It is
celebrating its 15th anniversary - some staying power for a "fad."
And it is definitely not remedial reading; it is an intervention,
not a program, designed to teach to read and write the bottom 20%
(the hardest to teach) of a first grade class, and it does that
amazingly well. Columbus, Detroit, St. Louis, and Chicago all have
the right to turn to Sylvan - and hopefully collect some data that
is based on scientific inquiry - research - since Sylvan has no
research background at this time (could it be that Sylvan is a
fad?!). Chicago, as one example, has tried just about everything
else, every fad available for both regular and special education.
Perhaps Sylvan can finally do it for Chicago.
In just the past month, Maine topped the nation in reading scores.
Connecticut also achieved within the top tier. Maine identified
three key components within its 15-year struggle for literacy, one
of which is Reading Recovery; and John Rowland, the governor of
Connecticut, identified the state-wide implementation of Reading
Recovery as implicit to Connecticut's success.
One of Reading Recovery's most effective traits is its function as a
first pre-referral for special education. If we can help "children"
avert the "learning disabled" label through short term, intensive,
highly skilled intervention, then do this for "children" by using
Reading Recovery or a similar program as the intervention strategy
so that a high percentage of "children" show no further need for
intervention, as demonstrated by innumerable longitudinal studies (Slavin,
1989; Pinnell, 1990 and 1991; Lyons, 1995; Clay, 1992, 1993). Why
maintain inequality when Reading Recovery has the potential to
equalize almost all children? To continue the inequality verges on
neglect.
Your implication that Reading Recovery lacks systematic instruction
and word level strategies is categorically incorrect. Reading
Recovery teachers give specific and explicit attention to letters,
sounds, and words, both while reading and writing extended text and
as direct instruction. Marilyn Adams, in her comprehensive review of
research on beginning reading instruction (1990), and referring to
Reading Recovery, acknowledged that the "importance of phonological
and linguistic awareness is explicitly recognized." She also stated
that Reading Recovery, along with several other programs, is
"designed to develop thorough appreciation of phonics." Consistent
with Adams' analysis, Stahl, Stahl, and McKenna (under review)
report that "all students in the Reading Recovery group made gains
in letter identification, phonemic awareness, and dictation tests,
... and all made significantly greater improvement in phonological
processing tasks than unserved 'at-risk' students." Reading Recovery
encourages meaning-making and problem solving with print. Decoding
is purposeful. Therefore, a Reading Recovery professional
understands phonemic awareness and its importance in beginning
reading and writing; the alphabetic principle and orthographic
knowledge and their importance in beginning reading and writing; and
they understand that a child needs to hear phonemes in words,
associate letters with sounds, recognize and use spelling patterns,
apply this knowledge in reading and writing, and expand this
knowledge to all the purposes for which it can be used in all levels
of literacy processing (Askew, Fountas, Lyons, Pinnell, Schmitt,
1998).
Your comment that "Reading Recovery is expensive" is an old, now
disproven argument. The Fall River, MA, study showed a net saving of
$1.3 million over five years with Reading Recovery. Compare the cost
of 20 weeks of Reading Recovery intervention to 12 years of special
education services. Compare it to the savings of just one
out-of-district special education placement ($40,000 to $60,000).
Within my own school district, we found that out of 70 successful
readers from Reading Recovery, only 2.8% were referred to special
education. Four years ago, the Massachusetts legislature completed
an in-depth seven month study, and it determined that for every $3
invested in Reading Recovery, a school district saves $5. Even in
the private sector, that is cost effective. These are not the traits
of a "fad."
Please, visit Massachusetts where success rates - and sustained
gains - of over 90% are routine. The largest urban district outside
of Boston posts a 94% success rate (data that is two weeks old).
This is hardly a failure. This is "children first" at its best.
Dewey said, "Education is not a preparation for life; it is life
itself," and watching first grade non-readers, we know how they can
"miss out" on life. Reading Recovery proves every day that the world
can be different for kids struggling to read and write. Reading
Recovery takes on the most difficult cases, and over and over again,
we see the light go on in their eyes when they discover, "I can do
it."
Finally, as we witness the reading debates ebb and flow
(unfortunately fueled by editorials such as yours), Reading Recovery
will remain a non-participant in the combat, but Reading Recovery
will administer to the casualties, regardless of the classroom
program. As Reading Recovery celebrates its 15th anniversary in the
United States, be aware that Reading Recovery has never moved from
one extreme to another. Reading Recovery steps into a child's life
at a critical time - before the cycle of failure begins. It remains
world wide as an example of the most powerful, effective staff
development program available, yielding the best trained teachers of
reading in their districts, and compared to other programs that go
on for years and never get children reading on grade level, Reading
Recovery is a bargain.
Very truly yours,
David J. Moriarty, Ed.D.
Director of Language Arts K-12
Medford Public Schools, MA
TEL: 781-393-2320
FAX: 781-395-1468
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