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Implementation:
Getting Started
Getting Started: The Process of Establishing
a Teacher Training
Site
When one or more school systems develop a serious interest in
Reading Recovery, thoughtful information gathering and decision
making need to occur. Much of the preparatory work outlined below
should be done during the investigation stage and during the time a
teacher leader is being trained. More detailed outlines are included
in the pdf version of this webpage. Some tasks will need to be
revisited and a few will not be completed until later.
1. Fact Finding
- Bring together a decision-making team, which includes
administrators from the central office, elementary school
principals, and some primary-grade teachers.
- Gather information about effective early interventions in
literacy.
- Invite a Reading Recovery trainer to explain the design of
Reading Recovery and the implementation process.
- Analyze the purposes, design, and requirements of Reading
Recovery.
- Compare innovations based on data and make choices.
- Decide on the type of site you need:
-
a teacher
training site with a teacher leader within a single district,
-
a teacher
leader within a single district serving multiple districts, or
-
a
consortium/cooperative of several districts that creates an
organizational structure with a teacher leader to serve all of
the districts involved
g. Make decisions necessary for start-up:
starting time, personnel, budget, facility,
schools.
2. Assessing Need in District or Multiple District
- Gather information about the number of children who will
need Reading Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura each year at the
local school and district levels.
- Consult building principals and school teams in the process.
- Calculate number of teachers needed to serve all the
children who will need the intervention.
- Make conservative estimates of results that take into
account mobility and low coverage in the initial implementation.
- Make a plan for gradual implementation based upon an
estimate of need and the level of interest among local schools
and the building principals.
3. Cost of Establishing a Site
- Create a long-range budget plan for Reading
Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura implementation. Costs will vary
as to whether you are establishing a teacher training site with
a teacher leader within a single district, setting up a single
district serving multiple districts, or forming a
consortium/cooperative of several districts.
- Estimate costs, considering factors related to:
-
teacher leader
position
-
number of
children who will need Reading Recovery instruction
-
number of
teacher positions needed to teach those children
-
initial and
ongoing training
-
materials
-
facilities
4. Funding Sources (from A Principal's Guide to Reading
Recovery)
Federal Funds
- Title I (Federal Funds)
-
Basic grants
(Part A)
-
Reading First
grants (Part B)
-
Grants for
migratory children (Part C)
-
Comprehensive
School Reform funds (Part F)
b. Title II (Federal Funds)
c. Title III (Federal Funds)
d. Other potential sources of
federal funds:
-
Twenty-First
Century Community Learning Centers (21CCLC)
-
Competitive
grants under Title IV
-
Innovative
Program state grants under Title V
State Funds
- Several states have appropriated early literacy funding from
their state budgets.
- Contact RRCNA for additional information.
- Also check the department of education in your state for
information or catalog of private foundations, community
foundations, and corporate-giving programs that have an interest
and commitment to education.
Local Funds
Community and local grants may be used as resources for
implementation of Reading Recovery.
5. Timeline and Implementation/Development Plan (from A
Principal's Guide to Reading
Recovery)
A successful Reading Recovery implementation requires careful
consideration of many factors before the training of teacher leaders
and teachers begins.
a. Creating a fit within a
comprehensive literacy plan
Reading Recovery
provides the early intervention component essential in a school's
comprehensive literacy plan. By intervening early, Reading Recovery
helps close the achievement gap between the lowest-achieving
children and their peers before the gap becomes too large to bridge.
Both good classroom teaching and Reading Recovery are needed to
prevent a significant number of children from encountering reading
and writing failure by the end of the first grade.
b. Building ownership
If you plan to
adopt Reading Recovery, the entire staff deserves to become
knowledgeable and participate in the decision-making process; the
more the ownership is shared, the greater the success will be. After
Reading Recovery's initial adoption, broad ownership will still need
to be supported and enhanced to promote continuous improvement.
c. Commitment from superintendent and school board to adopt and
implement
This is a vital key
at every level of interest to obtain a long-term commitment within
the school system and local school level. Reading Recovery must have
support at the local school level, but also the superintendent and
school board must be part of the implementation plan.
d. Affiliation with university training center
Teacher leaders may
be trained at any university training center, but after training
every teacher leader is attached to one university training center
for professional development and research support. The university
training center also provides consultation to teacher leaders on
training, implementation, and data collection.
e. Recruit and select site coordinator
The site
coordinator is an administrator who is responsible for overseeing
and managing the implementation of Reading Recovery. It is best if
the site coordinator is an administrator in the district's
administrative center, so that the person can support the teacher
leader in communicating with other administrators in the district.
The site coordinator and teacher leader work together serving at the
district level, multiple districts, or consortium/cooperatives.
While the site coordinator is responsible for overseeing and
managing implementation of Reading Recovery at the training site
level, some multiple districts or consortium/cooperatives sites
recruit a district coordinator to serve as a link between the school
district and the Reading Recovery training site.
f. Recruit candidates for teacher leader (from
Standards and
Guidelines of Reading
Recovery in the United States, available from
RRCNA)
The primary
responsibilities of Reading Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura teacher
leaders are to work with students, train teachers, provide
continuing professional development of school teams, disseminate
information, and participate in the Reading Recovery network to
maintain their own professional development. The teacher leader also
works closely with district administrators to achieve effective
program implementation, operation, and evaluation.
-
Gather
information from university training center in your state or at
the nearest location if your state does not have a university
training center.
-
Make a plan
with the university for training teacher leaders and for
continuing professional development.
-
Analyze costs
of training over time.
-
Select teacher
leader or leaders.
-
Make plans for
teacher leader training and for including the teacher in ongoing
planning in the district.
g. Teacher recruitment, selection,
and training
Recruiting
high-quality teachers is of critical importance. The primary
responsibility of Reading Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura teachers
is teaching children in their schools. The teacher also works
closely with building administrators and faculty as well as the
parents of Reading Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura students. The
Reading Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura teacher must be employed in
a school system that has a commitment to implementation. Refer to
key points in A Principal's Guide to Reading Recovery, Staff
Selection for Reading Recovery, page 21.
h. Create an evaluation plan
The creation of a
complete evaluation plan may take place after more is understood
about the program and when the teacher leader is trained and ready
to assist in designing the evaluation. It is wise, however, to
recognize the need for evaluation in the initial implementation
plan. Reading Recovery is a rigorously evaluated program. Data are
collected on every child, Reading Recovery teacher, and school. In
addition to the regular program evaluation data, many districts
conduct their own long-term studies. The following suggestions can
guide long-term studies:
-
Bring together
program implementers and evaluators.
-
Examine the
data collection process that is required for Reading Recovery.
-
Consider
studying the results of the program over several years.
-
Avoid making
quick decisions based on data from the first year of
implementation.
-
Make budget
allocations to provide for evaluation.
i. Compile all information into a
written implementation plan
-
Plan for 3
years beyond the initiation of the program.
-
Include tasks
to be performed during the year that the teacher leader is being
trained.
-
Consider the
plan a working document.
-
Be sure that
all members of the planning committee have an opportunity to
carefully consider and discuss the plan.
-
Share your plan
with the university training center for suggestions.
-
Make budget
allocations necessary to support the plan.
Establishing a Multi-District Teacher Training
Site
(Consortium/Cooperatives)
Example:
- Conduct fact finding information on Reading
Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura with a strong advisory or
governing team composed of stakeholders from multiple districts
to be served by a single district or the districts that make up
the consortium/cooperative.
- Assess the needs of the multiple districts or districts in
the consortium/cooperative.
- Establish the cost for the teacher training site. Within the
long-range implementation plan include the position of the
teacher leader and determine who will be responsible as the
fiscal agent for the multiple districts or
consortium/cooperative. Secure the yearly budget for the
training site.
- Secure the funding sources through a variety of resources.
Develop budgetary and administrative agreements. Ensure that the
agreements provide assurances for not only initial training, but
also for ongoing professional development for teachers and
teacher leaders over the next several years. Ensure that all
agreements are in writing and that all systems involved receive
a copy of the agreements.
- Make sure every member of the multiple districts or
consortium/cooperative fully understands the implementation of
Reading Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura and the roles and
responsibilities of members. Place all agreements in writing and
keep minutes of meetings.
- Develop a timeline and implementation plan for 3 years with
an advisory team made up of key stakeholders from the multiple
districts or consortium/cooperative districts. Variations of
multiple districts or consortium/cooperatives may exist.
It is vital as part of the implementation process that every day
Reading Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura training sites maintain
high quality and fidelity.
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