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A Synthesis of Research
on Reading Recovery
A Synthesis of Research on Reading Recovery
T. Shanahan & R. Barr. (1995). Reading Research Quarterly, 30,
958-996.
Background
Shanahan and Barr published a comprehensive and independent
evaluation of Reading Recovery. The goal of the authors was to offer
a thorough, systematic analysis of all available empirical work on
Reading Recovery. They reviewed all published evaluations and any
available unpublished ones that included sufficient basic
information to allow meaningful analysis. When possible to analyze
data in a more precise and direct manner, data were combined across
studies. Overall, consideration of existing research and evaluation
studies was largely qualitative.
Findings
"Evidence firmly supports the conclusion that Reading Recovery does
bring the learning of many children up to that of their
average-achieving peers. Thus, in answer to the questions "Does
Reading Recovery work?," we must respond in the affirmative. It is
clear that many children leave the program with well-developed
reading strategies, including phonemic awareness and knowledge of
spelling. Although some initially low-achieving students will
succeed without Reading Recovery, evidence indicates that many who
would not succeed do so as a result of this intervention." (p. 989)
"That Reading Recovery has been so successful is laudatory. It has
proven to be a robust program, both in terms of its consequences for
student learning and in replicability across sites. Further, it has
been a significant force in shaping the way we view early literacy
development." (p. 992)
Comments
This review provided perhaps the most comprehensive independent
evaluation of Reading Recovery up to its 1995 publication. Authors
cited both caveats and challenges for consideration related to
research and to practice.
Authors of a statewide study (Pinnell, Lyons, DeFord, Bryk, &
Seltzer, 1994) responded to Shanahan and Barr's claim that half the
data from the study had been lost. Pinnell explained in a letter to
the editor of Reading Research Quarterly, [see 32(1), p. 114] that
only 5 of the 40 schools were excluded and provided the rationale.
Shanahan and Barr responded to Pinnell in the same publication.
Parts of this study abstract appear in B.J. Askew,
I.C. Fountas, C.A. Lyons, G.S. Pinnell, & M.C. Schmitt (1998).
Reading Recovery Review: Understandings Outcomes & Implications, p.
23. Columbus, OH: Reading Recovery Council of North America.
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