基于证据的综合夏季扫盲干预方法对经济和文化多样化学生K-3阅读技能的影响

IF 1.5 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Erin K. Washburn, Samantha A. Gesel, Miranda S. Fitzgerald, Kristen D. Beach, Corinne R. Kingsbery
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要尽管与阅读科学相关的研究记录了明确、系统的阅读教学对所有学生的积极影响,但来自历史边缘化群体的学生往往有不同的学习机会,并且在大规模的阅读成绩测量中,他们的表现可能低于同龄人。夏季学习损失(SLL)可能会进一步加剧这些差异,即学生的学业进步在夏季停滞不前或下降。提供夏季学术干预,特别是在阅读方面,是缓解SLL的一个拟议解决方案。本探索性研究考察了夏季识字干预的综合方法的影响,该方法包括基础阅读技能(音位意识、语音、流利性)的循证阅读教学和更高级的学科识字技能对一年级至三年级学生阅读相关结果的影响。来自资源不足的城市学校的一年级、二年级和三年级学生的阅读相关结果。参与该方案的大多数学生来自历史上处于边缘地位的人口和低收入家庭,其中包括有不同识字需求的学生。70%的学生有资格享受免费或降价午餐,其中包括具有不同识字技能的学生、有发育障碍的学生和新兴的双语学习者。使用音位分割、无意义单词阅读、口语阅读流利性的标准参考评估以及课程嵌入的掌握测试对学生进行了岗前评估。结果表明,学生取得了显著的成长或保持了有分寸的阅读技能。结果表明,在音位分割流畅性、无意义单词阅读和掌握测试方面,一年级学生在毕业前有显著的成长。不断上升的二年级学生在掌握测试指标上表现出显著的增长,并在其他指标上保持了增长。不断上升的三年级学生在无意义单词阅读方面表现出显著的增长,并在其他方面保持了增长。这项研究的结果表明,旨在解决基础和学科识字技能的夏季识字干预可能会改善来自经济和文化不同背景的学生的阅读相关结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Impact of a Comprehensive, Evidence-Based Approach to Summer Literacy Intervention on the K-3 Reading Skills of Economically and Culturally Diverse Students
Abstract Although research related to the Science of Reading has documented the positive effects of explicit, systematic reading instruction for all students, students from historically marginalized groups often experience differential opportunities to learn and are likely to perform lower than their peers on large scale measures of reading achievement. These differences may be further exacerbated by summer learning loss (SLL), in which student academic progress stagnates or declines during the summer months. Providing summertime academic interventions, specifically in reading, has been one proposed solution for mitigating SLL. The present exploratory study examined the impact of a comprehensive approach to summer literacy intervention that included evidence-based reading instruction in foundational reading skills (phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency) and more advanced disciplinary literacy skills on student reading-related outcomes for rising 1st-3rd grade students. on student reading-related outcomes for rising first, second, and third graders from an under-resourced, urban school. The majority of students who participated in the programming were from historically marginalized populations and low-income families and included students with diverse literacy needs. with 70% of students qualifying for free or reduced-price lunch, and included students with diverse literacy skills, students with developmental disabilities, and emergent bilingual learners. Students were assessed pre-post using norm-referenced assessments of phonemic segmentation, nonsense word reading, and oral reading fluency as well as curriculum embedded Mastery Tests. Results indicated that students made significant growth or maintained measured reading skills. Results indicated that rising first grade students made significant growth pre-post on measures of phonemic segmentation fluency, nonsense word reading, and Mastery Tests. Rising 2nd grade students demonstrated significant growth on Mastery Tests measures and maintained on other measures. Rising 3rd grade students demonstrated significant growth on aspects of nonsense word reading and maintained on other measures. Findings from this study indicate that a summer literacy intervention designed to address both foundational and disciplinary literacy skills may improve reading-related outcomes for students from economically and culturally diverse backgrounds.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
24
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