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Investing Equity Funding
in Early Literacy
Investing Equity Funding in Early Literacy
Batten, P. (2004, Winter). ERS Spectrum, 22(1), 40–45.
Background
The author of this study cited three purposes:
- to determine the effectiveness of Reading Recovery as an
appropriate early literacy intervention for children in schools
receiving equity funding
- to see if Reading Recovery closes the literacy gap for poor
minority children
- to determine whether the intervention is a worthwhile
expenditure
Two groups of children from 15 schools in three New Jersey school
districts received a full Reading Recovery program. The sample
included 43 low SES African American students and 52 low SES
Hispanic students. The children’s achievement was measured in fall
and spring by two tasks on the Observation Survey of Early
Literacy Achievement—the Text Reading Level and Hearing and
Recording Sounds in Words.
Findings
Both African American and Hispanic students began Reading Recovery
lessons with below-grade level performance (Stanine 3 on Hearing and
Recording Sounds in Words and Stanine 1 on Text Reading). At the end
of Grade 1, both groups scored well within the average range on both
tasks at Stanine 7.
Comments
The author concluded that Reading Recovery does demonstrate an
investment that reduces the achievement gap of disadvantaged urban
children.
This abstract first appeared in Schmitt, M. C.,
Askew, B. J., Fountas, I. C., Lyons, C. A., & Pinnell, G. S. (2005).
Changing Futures: The Influence of Reading Recovery in the United
States. Worthington, OH: Reading Recovery Council of North
America.
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