Stones from a Glasshouse

IF 4.3 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Joe Stouffer, Janice Van Dyke
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The Ontario Human Rights Commission’s (OHCR) Right to Read Report calls for school districts to implement early literacy interventions that have been scientifically proven to be effective for young children with reading difficulties. The acknowledgment of early intervention as an essential service for young children experiencing reading difficulties is a strong and welcome message in the report. However, the report recommends a narrow course for reading interventions in Ontario, drawing on discourse from the Science of Reading community, which questionably frames current interventions, such as Reading Recovery, as unscientific, ineffective commercial programs. In this response, the authors contest the one-sidedness of these recommendations based on a paradox in the report between what constitutes an effective early literacy intervention supported by science and the standards for effectiveness the OHRC requires of interventions it endorses versus those it discredits. Rather than dismissing one approach or the other outright, a call is made for school leadership to consider broader reading science and the strengths of various approaches instead of narrowing the menu of effective literacy interventions that may support diverse learners.
温室里的石头
安大略省人权委员会(OHCR)的《阅读权报告》呼吁各学区实施早期识字干预措施,这些干预措施已被科学证明对有阅读困难的幼儿有效。报告承认早期干预对有阅读困难的幼儿是一项必要的服务,这是一个强烈而受欢迎的信息。然而,该报告建议在安大略省对阅读干预进行一个狭窄的课程,借鉴阅读科学社区的话语,该社区将当前的干预措施,如阅读恢复,视为不科学,无效的商业计划。在这一回应中,作者对这些建议的片面性提出了质疑,因为报告中存在一个悖论,即科学支持的有效早期识字干预的构成与OHRC所要求的干预措施的有效性标准之间存在矛盾。与其直接否定一种或另一种方法,不如呼吁学校领导考虑更广泛的阅读科学和各种方法的优势,而不是缩小可能支持不同学习者的有效读写干预措施的范围。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Teaching and Learning
Journal of Teaching and Learning EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
2.20%
发文量
18
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