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Phonological Processing Skills and
the Reading Recovery Program
Phonological Processing Skills and the Reading Recovery Program
S.J. Iversen & W.E. Tunmer. (1993). Journal of Educational
Psychology, 80(4), 437-447.
Background
Iversen and Tunmer conducted a study to determine whether the
Reading Recovery program would be more effective if systematic
instruction in phonological recording skills were incorporated into
the program. Three matched groups of 32 at-risk readers were
compared:
- children taught by teachers who received Reading Recovery training.
- children taught by teachers who received Reading Recovery training
that included phonological recording skills as part of the lesson,
and
- children who received a standard intervention (not Reading
Recovery).
Measures included all six tasks of the Diagnostic Survey, Dolch Word
Recognition Test, Yopp-Singer Phoneme Segmentation Test, Phoneme
Deletion Test, and Pseudoword Decoding Task.
Findings
The critical finding in this study was that the two Reading Recovery
groups preformed at very similar levels when Reading Recovery
lessons were successfully completed (discontinued). Both groups
performed much better on all measures than children in the standards
intervention group, and they often performed significantly better
than classroom controls (especially on phonological segmentation and
phoneme deletion). Results revealed that the modified Reading
Recovery group reached levels of performance required for
discontinuing more quickly than the standard Reading Recovery group.
Authors acknowledged that both the standard and modified Reading
Recovery programs included explicit instruction in phonological
awareness.
For more information see Six Reading Recovery Studies: Meeting
the Criteria for Scientifically Based Research. (PDF version)
This abstract first appeared in What Evidence Says About Reading
Recovery (2002). Columbus, OH: Reading Recovery Council of North
America.
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