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Phonics
Does Reading Recovery teach phonics?
Reading Recovery lessons include all five essential components
of reading instruction identified by the National Reading Panel
(2000). The panel cautioned against making phonics instruction the
dominant component in a reading program, either in the amount of
time devoted to it or in the significance attached. They
acknowledged that learning to read and write is a complex process.
Within a comprehensive approach, Reading Recovery teachers
understand the importance of
phonemic awareness and
phonics for
beginning readers and writers. During lessons, teachers attend to
letters, sounds, and words and incorporate learning about
letter-sound relationships during the reading and writing of
extended text and as explicit, direct instruction.
Recognition of Reading Recovery’s success in teaching phonics
In her book on research related to beginning reading, Marilyn
Adams said this about Reading Recovery lessons: “The importance of
phonological and linguistic awareness is also explicitly recognized”
(1990, p. 420).
Researchers and scholars outside the Reading Recovery community
have demonstrated that Reading Recovery lessons lead to the
acquisition of phonological skills:
- The
What Works Clearinghouse report documents positive effects
(its highest rating) on Reading Recovery students' alphabetics
skills. Alphabetics includes phonemic awareness, print
awareness, letter knowledge, and phonics.
- A study by
Stahl, Stahl, and McKenna (1999) concluded that
Reading Recovery children acquire phonological awareness and
phonological recoding within their lessons.
- A study by
Iversen and Tunmer (1993) acknowledged that
Reading Recovery includes explicit instruction in phonological
areas and that the children performed better than a control
group on phonological assessments.
- Researchers in the United Kingdom
(Sylva & Hurry, 1996)
compared Reading Recovery with a phonological intervention. They
found Reading Recovery to be the more powerful intervention
across time and particularly effective for socially
disadvantaged children.
References
Adams, M. J. (1990). Beginning to read: Thinking and learning
about print. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Iversen, S., & Tunmer, W. (1993). Phonological processing skills
and the Reading Recovery program. Journal of Educational
Psychology, 85(1), 112–126.
Stahl, K. A. D., Stahl, S., & McKenna, M. C. (1999). The
development of phonological awareness and orthographic processing in
Reading Recovery. Literacy Teaching and Learning: An
International Journal of Early Reading and Writing, 4(1), 27–42.
Sylva, K., & Hurry, J. (1995). Early intervention in children
with reading difficulties: An evaluation of Reading Recovery and a
phonological training. Literacy, Teaching and Learning: An
International Journal of Early Literacy, 2(2), 49–68.
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