|
NOINDEX
includes/content/subnav.asp NOINDEX
|
Response to Investors' Business Daily Editorial
Comments
Investor's Business Daily Article of 4/1/99 -- When Education
Theories Go Bad
The editorial of April 1, 1999, "When Education Theories Go Bad," is
both inaccurate and irresponsible. The editorial claims that
Columbus, Ohio, is turning to Sylvan Learning Systems (as opposed to
Reading Recovery) because only Sylvan can offer phonics. The
assumption is that Reading Recovery has failed&emdash;thus the title
of the editorial. This letter will address several of the
inaccuracies and misguided assumptions about Reading Recovery, about
New Zealand, and about Columbus, Ohio.
The editorial claims that Reading Recovery has failed. This is
patently untrue. Reading Recovery is a highly effective
tutorial program for first graders who are at risk of failure in
learning to read. Reading Recovery works in public schools
and collects data on every single child served in order to document
the replication of results. Over 13 years of data collection a total
of 436,249 children entered the program and 60% of these children
were successfully raised to average performance level for grade
level (counting every child, including those that had as few as one
or two lessons). Of the 313,848 children who had time to experience
a complete program (about 30 hours of tutoring), 81% satisfied
rigorous criteria for successful release. Reading Recovery is an
early, short-term intervention to help children to make accelerated
progress so that they become readers and writers. Of course, they
still need ongoing high quality classroom instruction every year
they are in elementary school.
Reading Recovery success is clearly documented in the literature.
According to researchers Cunningham and Allington, "No other
remedial program has ever come close to achieving the results
demonstrated by Reading Recovery." (Cunningham, P.M., & Allington,
R.L., Classrooms That Work, Harper Collins Publisher, 1994.,
p 254). Two other independent researchers conducted an exhaustive
review of research. They said, "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 question 'Does Reading Recovery work?' we must respond
in the affirmative." (Shanahan, T., & Barr, R. A synthesis of
research on Reading Recovery, Reading Research Quarterly, 30,
1995, 958-996).
We challenge the writer to show comparable research results for any
other intervention or remedial program. The editor should examine
the research on Sylvan Learning's track record in the public
schools. Where are the data?
The editorial insinuated that Reading Recovery is a "business."
This is not true. Reading Recovery is a not-for-profit program that
involves collaboration among schools, districts, and universities.
Districts that adopt Reading Recovery are granted a royalty-free use
of the service mark for the program. Sylvan Learning, on the other
hand, is a business.
The editorial referred to Reading Recovery as a "whole
language" program. Reading Recovery is not aligned with any
classroom program. It is designed to provide one-to-one extra help.
The teacher works with the child to determine just what he needs,
whatever the classroom program.
The Reading Recovery lesson provides a masterful combination of
components that are consistent with the recommended research by Clay
(Guidebook for Reading Recovery Teachers). Marilyn Adams, who
provided a U.S. government funded comprehensive survey of research
on beginning reading says that the Reading Recovery program has been
methodically designed to establish and secure that whole complex of
lower-order skills on which reading so integrally depends." (Adams,
M.J. Beginning to read: Thinking and learning about print.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press., 1990, p. 419). Instruction provides for
learning in the areas of phonological awareness, letter
identification, concepts about print, word learning, problem-solving
strategies and attention to meaning.
The editorial claimed that Reading Recovery does not teach
phonics. This is completely false. Learning about letters,
sounds, and words are part of the established Reading Recovery
procedures. Adams (1990) noted that developing the ability to hear
the sounds in words (phonemic awareness) is explicitly recognized in
the Reading Recovery program. Independent researchers provide
evidence that students in Reading Recovery made significantly
greater improvement in phonological processing tasks than students
not served in Reading Recovery (Stahl, K.A.D., Stahl, S. McKenna,
M.C., in press, The development of phonological awareness and
orthographic processing in Reading Recovery). Data collected on all
students in Reading Recovery show that they make dramatic gains in
letter identification, phonemic awareness, and the ability to hear
and record sounds when writing from dictation.
The editorial claimed that that the New Zealand government
says that Reading Recovery is ineffective. That simply is
not true. No reference was given for the "study" mentioned in the
editorial; however, government figures indicate just the opposite. A
very high percentage of children (over 90%) are successful in
Reading Recovery. The number referred on for special education is
lower than 2% of the six-year-old population. We could learn
something from this country. (See Kerslake, J. A summary of the 1995
data on Reading Recovery. Research and Statistics Division Bulletin,
No. 5, Ministry of Education, Wellington, New Zealand).
The editorial claimed that Columbus, Ohio was dropping Reading
Recovery. Inaccurate and misleading. Reading Recovery has
never been in all schools in Columbus; it typically serves schools
in lower economic areas where there are compensatory funds.
Currently, each school may select classroom programs and
intervention programs under an organizational structure called "site
based" management. Based upon results and school choice, Reading
Recovery will continue to serve children in many Columbus schools.
I want to emphasize again that Reading Recovery is an early
intervention program for young children, not a complete literacy
program. It is research-based. It has one clear goal: "to
dramatically reduce the number of learners who have extreme
difficulty with literacy learning and the cost of these learners to
educational systems." (Quoted from Marie Clay's implementation visit
to North Carolina, 1994). It is designed to be part of a high
quality, comprehensive program to assure literacy learning at every
grade. It gets children started and it does it very well.
Reading Recovery has never been the whole answer to reading issues
and neither is anything else. The leaders of the National Institute
for Childhood Health and Development, Washington, D.C., have
recognized the complexity of learning to read as well as the
challenge. The findings of all research must be interpreted with
caution; always more investigation is needed. Lyon cautions against
simplistic interpretations:
The tendency to interpret the NICHD research, often in the name of
"science," as supporting phonics instruction as a panacea for
literacy problems is particularly disturbing. For example, materials
distributed by the National Right to Read foundation as well as a
report that purports to summarize NICHD research (Center for the
Future of Teaching and Learning, 1996 [Grossen, B.], exaggerate the
findings of these studies, especially the extent to which the
intervention results support the instructional recommendations in
the reports. NICHD researchers have used a variety of phonics
techniques, often as part of a comprehensive approach to
intervention. No NICHD data support a single approach to phonics,
much less a specific sequence, number, or set of rules that must be
learned, or an essential role for decontextualized drills. We lament
the reliance on ideology and invective as opposed to the more
difficult task of completing the research that will help educators
and policy makers implement effective reading practices. No simple,
single message can be obtained from the NICHD research (Fletcher,
J., & Lyon, R. (1998). Reading: A Research-based approach. In W.
Evers (Ed.). what's gone wrong in America's classrooms. Hoover
Institute Press, Stanford University, CA.
Reading Recovery has helped many thousands of children to become
readers and writers. It is available as an integral part of our
school system. It has a long and trustworthy track record. Like
anything else, it must be implemented with high quality and it must
be part of a good school program.
I must assume that this editorial was written in the absence of any
reliable information. Perhaps it is part of a business competition
strategy.
Gay Su Pinnell
The Ohio State University |
Maribeth Schmitt
Purdue University, IN
|
Noel Jones
University of North Carolina
Wilmington
|
Adria Klein
California State University
San Bernardino |
Barbara Schubert
St. Mary's College
Moraga, CA |
|
Back Previous Page
|