NCLB Testimony
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"Public Testimony for the
Commission on No Child Left
Behind"
PUBLIC TESTIMONY
for the
Commission on No Child Left Behind
Successful Interventions: Helping Schools Achieve Academic Success
June 9, 2006
Madison, WI
“Reading Recovery: Helping Schools Achieve Academic Success”
Thank you for the opportunity to provide written testimony for
the record of the Commission on No Child Left Behind (Commission)
hearing on Successful Interventions: Helping Schools Achieve
Academic Success. This testimony describes how Reading Recovery
helps schools achieve academic success and concludes with
recommendations for reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act.
The Reading Recovery Council of North America, Inc. (RRCNA) is a
not-for-profit association of Reading Recovery professionals,
advocates, and partners. The vision of RRCNA is that children will
be proficient readers and writers by the end of first grade and our
mission is to ensure access to Reading Recovery for every child who
needs its support.
Reading Recovery is a highly respected, research-based early
intervention that has reached 1.5 million first-graders who struggle
with early reading and writing. Eight of ten (80%) of the
hardest-to-teach children who complete lessons reach grade-level
standards in 12 to 20 weeks of daily 30-minute lessons. Reading
Recovery requires highly trained teachers and as a result partners
with more than 20 universities and nearly 500 teacher training sites
across America. The vast majority of schools with Reading Recovery
use federal education funds authorized by the NCLB Act to provide
professional development and instruction. Many scientifically-based
peer-reviewed journal articles support Reading Recovery’s
effectiveness.
Reading Recovery contributes to school success and helps schools
achieve adequate yearly progress (AYP) by:
- accelerating student learning and helping children make
continued progress.
- closing the reading achievement gap between white and minority
students.
- reducing unnecessary retentions and referrals to special
education.
- providing a Spanish reconstruction - Descubriendo la Lectura - for
English language learners who receive classroom instruction in
Spanish.
- reducing the cost of low-achieving students to educational
systems.
- providing professional development that benefits educational
systems at many levels.
- integrating research and practice through an international network
of university faculty.
Reading Recovery instruction accelerates learning and helps
children make continued progress:
First grade children having the most difficulty learning to read
and write (approximately the bottom 20% of the class) experience
accelerated progress as a result of expert instruction by Reading
Recovery teachers. Children meet individually for 30 minutes daily
with a specially trained teacher for an average of 12 to 20 weeks.
During this short-term intervention, children make
faster-than-average (i.e. accelerated) progress that permits them to
catch up to their peers and continue to work on their own within an
average group setting in the regular classroom program. Results
indicate that Reading Recovery meets the challenge of closing the
gap early, before a cycle of failure commences. Considering that
these children started at a great educational disadvantage, these
results are remarkable.
Numerous research and evaluation studies in the United States
have demonstrated that children continue to improve their literacy
performance after Reading Recovery/Descubriendo la Lectura
instruction. These studies lead to the following conclusions:
- The majority of former Reading Recovery students continue to
perform within an average range of class performance.
- Literacy performance after Reading Recovery seems to become
stronger over time.
- The need for costly long-term remediation for many children is
dramatically reduced.
Attached is a fact sheet (“Continued Progress of Reading Recovery
Children”) identifying studies of Reading Recovery students in five
states and students receiving Descubriendo la Lectura lessons. The
data demonstrate that children make continued progress academically
in the classroom after receiving lessons and perform well on
assessments in later grades. Because all of these studies have been
published, readers can explore the details of each study.
They consistently demonstrate that children receiving Reading
Recovery instruction in first grade perform at least as well as
other children on 3rd and 4th grade assessments.
Reading Recovery narrows the literacy achievement gap with early
intervention:
A statewide study compared students served by Reading Recovery
with a random sample. The results were presented at the 2004 annual
meeting of the American Educational Research Association, San Diego,
CA. The study found that students who successfully completed Reading
Recovery lessons, either narrowed or closed the achievement gap
along race/ethnicity and income lines when compared with students in
the randomly-selected comparison group.
A “Reading Recovery Research Brief” is attached with further
information about this ground-breaking research.
Reading Recovery reduces unnecessary retentions and referrals to
special education:
Among the many studies of the impact of Reading Recovery on first
grade retentions and referrals to special education are
district-based analyses that Reading Recovery successfully reduced
both retentions and children classified as having learning
disabilities. “Reducing Retention and Learning Disability Placement
Through Reading Recovery: An Educationally Sound Cost-Effective
Choice” and “Demonstrating the Cost-Effectiveness of Reading
Recovery: Because It Makes a Difference” are attached to describe
the results in Ohio and Massachusetts respectively.
Descubriendo la Lectura is effective for children whose initial
instruction is in Spanish:
Reading Recovery has been reconstructed for children whose
initial instruction is in Spanish. The intervention is known as
Descubriendo la Lectura (DLL). Researchers have compared the
subsequent performance of children served by DLL with a random
sample of their peers in Grades 2 and 3. Major findings include:
- Classroom teachers perceived DLL and random sample students as
comparable in literacy abilities and group placement.
- DLL children read at text levels above their peers on oral Spanish
reading tests and equivalent to their peers on SABE-2.
Reading Recovery is cost-effective prevention that helps schools
achieve academic success:
When Reading Recovery teachers work with the lowest-performing
students, they interrupt the cycle of failure, helping most of the
lowest achievers learn like successful first grade readers and
writers. Reading Recovery reduces the cost of literacy failure to
the educational system and serves as a reliable diagnostic and
identification process for the few children needing longer term
support.
Public school administrators have estimated cost savings
associated with Reading Recovery when compared with retention and
referral to special education programs. A study by the Massachusetts
State Legislature reported that every $3 invested in Reading
Recovery saved $5 in other costs. A Fall River, Massachusetts
estimate found a five-year cost avoidance of $1.7 million through
implementation of Reading Recovery.
Reading Recovery professionals benefit schools and districts on
many levels:
Reading Recovery teachers provide individualized instruction for
half the day and work with many other children in a variety of
teaching options during the other half of their day. It is estimated
that Reading Recovery teachers positively impact four times as many
students in the second half of their day in addition to students
receiving individualized lessons. Not only can they provide
classroom instruction, and/or provide small group instruction, many
Reading Recovery teachers also serve as staff developers for other
educators.
In addition, after more than 20 years of implementation in the
U.S., Reading Recovery trained professionals have advanced to other
leadership roles in educational systems, including curriculum
directors, funds administrators, principals and superintendents.
Reading Recovery professional development integrates research and
practice:
Outstanding professional development and continuing education are
hallmarks of Reading Recovery. Reading Recovery conducts ongoing
professional development at three levels: university trainers,
teacher leaders, and teachers. The three-tiered model of
professional development beginning at the university level assures
that the most recent research data can be integrated into practice
and evaluated for effectiveness.
University trainers have broad responsibilities that include:
training teacher leaders in post-masters graduate study and
preparing them to train teachers at the district level,
collaborating with other faculty members and schools toward
comprehensive school reform through early literacy initiatives, and
conducting research and program evaluation.
Recommendations for reauthorization:
Reading Recovery contributes to the academic success of students,
schools and districts by providing research, professional
development, and instruction that helps the lowest-performing first
grade students overcome obstacles to literacy and become successful
learners. As such, the Reading Recovery Council of North America
recommends the following:
- Retain and enhance recognition of and support for
instructional and systemic components of successful schools in the
reauthorization, including:
- Emphasize accelerated learning to close the achievement gap and
help students achieve at grade level.
- Recognize teacher quality as a critical component of student and
school success, through high quality, on-going professional
development.
- Preserve state and local control by retaining the High Objective
Uniform State Standard of Evaluation (HOUSSE) option for state
teacher quality systems.
- Modify the Reading First statute in Title I, Part B to clarify
that one-to-one instruction is an eligible use of funds by codifying
the intent of language from the Conference Report to Accompany HR 1,
Government Printing Office, printed December 13, 2001, p. 768:
“The Conferees intend State educational agencies and local
educational agencies to be able to select from a wide variety of
quality programs and interventions to fund under Reading First and
Early Reading First, including small group and one to one
instruction, so long as those programs are based in research meeting
the criteria in the definition of scientifically based reading
research.”
Further, modify the statute to permit integration of the Reading
First program with the consolidated application that many states
submit to the U.S. Department of Education for federal funds.
- Modify the definitions of scientifically based research and
scientifically based reading research to integrate relevance as well
as rigor and to recognize successful research-to-practice models.
The Reading Recovery Council of America welcomes questions and
feedback regarding this testimony. Please contact Jady Johnson,
Executive Director 614.310.7323 for further information.
Extensive information about Reading Recovery, Descubriendo la
Lectura and RRCNA is available on our web site at:
www.readingrecovery.org
More information about the Commission on No Child Left Behind is
available at:
http://www.aspeninstitute.org/site/c.huLWJeMRKpH/b.2600779/k.4233/Media_AdvisoriesPress_Releases.htm
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