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Does Reading Recovery Work in
Kansas? A Retrospective Longitudinal
Study of Sustained Effects
Does Reading Recovery Work in Kansas? A Retrospective Longitudinal
Study of Sustained Effects
C. Briggs & B. Young. (2003). The Journal of Reading Recovery, 3(1),
59-64.
Background
Briggs and Young investigated the longer-term effects of Reading
Recovery. The study compared a random sample of former Reading
Recovery students (1998-1999) with a comparison group of students
representing a normal range of reading and writing abilities from
schools matched with Reading Recovery student schools. Comparison
schools did not have Reading Recovery in 1998-1999 and were matched
for size, socioeconomic status, and race/ethnicity.
The sample included Reading Recovery students from eight Kansas
school districts that had the program available in 1998-1999. Of the
195 students still in their original school, 56 were randomly
selected. Students representing the average range of achievement in
three comparison schools matched to Reading Recovery schools for
size, socioeconomic status, and race/ethnicity, with 79 students
randomly selected for the comparison group.
Gates-MacGinitie Reading Test, a standardized fourth-grade test
measuring vocabulary, comprehension, and total reading achievement,
was the measure used.
Findings
"This longitudinal study of a relatively small but statistically
significant number of students found that when scores for a group of
students originally identified as most at-risk for learning to read
in first grade were compared to scores of a randomly selected
comparison group spanning all ability levels, the at-risk children
who successfully finished their individual Reading Recovery programs
performed at near-mean levels compared to the comparison group" (p.
62).
Authors
Researchers for this study were Dr. Connie Briggs, associate
professor in the Teacher's College and director of Kansas Regional
Reading Recovery Center at Emporia State University, and Brian K.
Young, graduate research assistant at Emporia State University.
Full text of Does Reading Recovery Work in Kansas? A
retrospective Longitudinal Study of Sustained Effects (PDF
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