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An Experimental Evaluation
of Reading Recovery
An Experimental Evaluation of Reading Recovery
Y. Center, K. Wheldall, L. Freeman, L. Outhred, & M. McNaught. (1995).
Reading Research Quarterly, 30, 240-263.
Background
Center, Wheldall, Freeman, Outhred, and McNaught evaluated the
effectiveness of Reading Recovery schools in New South Wales.
Low-achieving children were randomly assigned to either Reading
Recovery (n=31) or a control group (n=39) of low-progress students
who had not entered Reading Recovery by November. A third group
(n=39) consisted of students from five matched schools. By the end
of the study, sample sizes were 23, 16, and 32 respectively.
Measures used were Clay's Diagnostic Survey, Burt Word Reading Test,
Neale Analysis of Reading Ability, Waddington Diagnostic Spelling
Test, Phonemic Awareness Test, Cloze Test, Word Attack Skills Test,
and Woodcock Reading Mastery.
Findings
At post-test evaluation (15 weeks after the pre-test) an independent
assessment showed that Reading Recovery students scored
significantly higher on all tests measuring reading in context and
in isolation. Of the eight measures reported, the only ones that did
not differ significantly were a cloze test and a phonemic awareness
measure. At short-term maintenance (15 weeks after the post-test)
the Reading Recovery control group still scored significantly higher
than the control group on six of the eight measures, including
Clay's test reading measure and several standardized measures of
text and word reading. At this point the Reading Recovery group also
scored significantly higher than the control group on phonemic
awareness.
The study's published results for medium-term maintenance (12 months
after the post-test) appear to have errors. The authors report "no
overall significant group effect, F(8,30) = 0.262, p = .0268)" (p.
253). There appear to be several typos and errors in this
statistical statement beyond the inclusion of an additional closing
parenthesis. An F value of 2.62 would match the probability level of
.0268. Since the authors state that "significant multivariate
results (alpha = 0.05) were followed up by univariate pairwise
multiple comparisons (alpha = 0.01)" (p. 250), the conclusion should
be that the MANOVA revealed an overall significant group effect in
favor of Reading Recovery. Still, the only univariate result was for
text reading. The authors point out that the reduced difference
between the Reading Recovery and control groups found in the
12-month follow-up could be due to the fact that 15 of the 31
control group students (probably those with the lowest scores) had
been eliminated from the control group to receive Reading Recovery
instruction.
Importance
The study provides strong, independent replication of the pattern of
results found in other research and in the U.S. national evaluation
data for all participating students. The authors state that their
"results clearly indicate that low-progress students, exposed to 15
weeks of Reading Recovery, outperformed control students on Clay
book-level and Burt Word Reading tests and on all Set 2 tests which
measure reading and writing words in context and isolation" (p.
256). Despite a number of qualifications related to metalinguistic
measures, the article reports independently measured and extremely
large effect size for text reading, 3.05 and 1.55 for post-test and
short-term maintenance respectively (p. 253).
For more information see Six Reading Recovery Studies: Meeting the
Criteria for Scientifically Based Research. (PDF
version)
Taken from What Evidence Says About Reading Recovery (2002).
Columbus, Ohio: Reading Recovery Council of North America.
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