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| UGA experts evaluating the state’s
Reading First program include (from left) Donna Alvermann, Michelle
Commeyras, graduate student Çig dem Alagoz, Dorothy Harnish
and Steve Cramer. |
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On the outside looking in |
| Education college team evaluates state’s
Reading First program |
By Michael Childs
mchilds@coe.uga.edu |
A team of experts in assessment and
reading education in the College of Education has begun a three-year
project to determine whether Georgia’s Reading First program,
one of the major initiatives of the federal No Child Left Behind legislation,
is effective, both in its implementation and in its impact on student
achievement.
The UGA team, led by Dorothy Harnish, associate research scientist
and co-director of the Occupational Research Group, received a $1.17 million
contract from the state Department of Education to serve as external
evaluators of the program, which is aimed at students from kindergarten
through third grade. The contract began this past fall and is renewable
annually.
Georgia is receiving nearly $200 million in federal funding over
the next six years to support schools and teachers in applying the
Reading First program, which aims to ensure that all children learn
to read well by the end of the third grade.
Program requirements
The program, based on reading research carried out by the U.S. Department
of Education, requires K–3 students in participating schools
to spend three hours a day on reading. It includes an emphasis on
explicit reading instruction (particularly for phonics), a program
of professional development and student assessment, and the provision
of classroom materials and reading tutors.
More than 3,000 Georgia teachers were trained in the methods
in week-long work sessions hosted by the state this past summer. There
is also a pool of 100 literacy coaches, one or two per school,
who have been hired under the federal grant to monitor and help implement
the work of the teachers.
The evaluation project involves four UGA faculty members and seven
doctoral students from three units of the education college: language
and literacy education, the Educational Research Laboratory Test Scoring
and Reporting Services, and the Occupational Research Group.
Faculty members include Harnish; Donna Alvermann, Distinguished Research
Professor; Michelle Commeyras, professor both of language and of literacy
education; and Steve Cramer, associate director of the Professional
Assessment Group, a testing and evaluation service based in the college.
The instruction being implemented in Reading First consists of methods
that have been found to be successful, as measured by experimental
and quasi-experimental reading research. The methods address five
components of reading that the National Reading Panel decided were
key: phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension.
“We have been teaching pre-service and in-service teachers in
reading education courses the methods of instruction recommended in
Reading First for years,” says Commeyras.
“We have also taught other methods of instruction that have
been shown to be effective through other research methods, such as
descriptive, ethnographic, correlational and case studies,”
says Alvermann.
Classroom observations
UGA doctoral students in reading education, trained with the observation
process and rating instruments, have spent many days this past fall
in K–3 classrooms in 38 counties that are implementing
the Reading First program to see how the strategies are being used.
Next spring, classrooms in another 38 counties will be observed.
“We developed and administered a teacher knowledge survey so
we can use a baseline data on what teachers know about reading instruction
prior to beginning to use the new strategies in the classroom,”
says Harnish. “Then we’ll use that again at the end of
the year, and two years and three years, to see if there are changes
in that based on the professional development that they’re going
to get, which is quite intense.”
UGA researchers will also interview the 100 literacy coaches
and collect monthly survey data from the K–3 teachers, administrators
and parents.
“Reading First is research-based instruction that studies show
works best for teaching reading. What the implementation piece of
the evaluation focuses on is to what extent the teachers are actually
using the research-based strategies to teach reading in their classroom,”
says Harnish. “Then the other question is ‘What impact
is it having on students and their ability to read?’ ”
At the end of each year, the researchers will look at the difference
in the percentage of students who are reading at grade level in each
of those grades, based on student achievement in reading on the Iowa
Test of Basic Skills and student progress on a nationally standardized
test of basic early literacy skills called the Dynamic Indicators
of Basic Early Literacy Skills.
“We are learning a lot about
schools across the state and about the dedication of teachers to improving
students’ reading,” says Alvermann. |
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