READING RECOVERY
Reading Recovery is an early intervention program designed
by Marie M. Clay of New Zealand to serve children in first grade who are
having difficulty learning to read and write. The goal of Reading
Recovery is to produce independent readers whose reading and writing improve
whenever they read and write by means of a self-extending system.
This is done through accelerated learning. Children are expected
to make faster than average progress so that they can catch up with other
children in their class. Reading Recovery provides one-to-one tutoring,
five days per week, 30 minutes a day plus a few additional minutes to practice
fluent writing of selected high frequency words and choose books for reading
at home. Reading Recovery is supplemental to classroom instruction
and lasts an average of 12-20 weeks. Each child's daily program is
discontinued when he/she displays solid evidence of having developed a
self-extending system through using a variety of unprompted strategies
to read increasingly difficult text and to independently write their own
messages.
THE READING RECOVERY LESSON
Reading Recovery utilizes and builds upon genuine conversations
between teacher and child as the primary basis of instruction. This teacher-child
dialogue has been found to be an effective method for teachers to help
students learn to deal with complex tasks such as reading. The Reading
Recovery lesson follows a strict routine of components containing activities
that are molded to meet the individual needs of each child based upon a
daily analysis of student progress by the teacher.
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Directional movement
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One-to-one matching
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Locating known words
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Locating an unknown word
More Advanced Strategies
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Checking on oneself or self-monitoring
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Cross-checking on information
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Searching for cues
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Self-correction
Cues
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Meaning - gleaned through pictures and story line
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Structure - syntactically appropriate
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Visual - letter sounds, chunks (word families), prefixes
& suffixes
University professors (Trainers of Teacher Leaders) train
Teacher Leaders who in turn train Teachers in the Reading Recovery teaching
techniques. Experienced teachers are provided professional development
in a year long curriculum that integrates theory and practice and is characterized
by intensive interaction with colleagues. Teachers-in-training conduct
lessons behind the glass and are observed and given feedback by their colleagues.
In addition, Reading Recovery teacher leaders visit teachers at their schools
and help them critique and improve their teaching and observation
skills. All teachers involved in Reading Recovery; Teacher Trainers,
Teacher Leaders as well as Reading Recovery Teachers are required to have
students.
TERMINOLOGY
The Observation Survey contains six measures of
a child's attempts on reading and writing tasks and provides information
about what the child knows and can control in his/her learning. The components
of the survey are:
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1. Letter Identification - a list of 54 different characters
including upper and lower case letters and the extra forms of a and g.
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2. Word Test - a list of 20 words most frequently used
in early reading materials.
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3. Concepts about Print - a variety of tasks related to
book reading, familiarity with books, and specific concepts about printed
language.
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4. Writing Vocabulary - children are given an opportunity
to write all of the words they know in ten minutes.
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5. Dictation Test - a story is read to the child who writes
the words using sound analysis.
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6. Text Reading Level - a determination of reading level
based on actual books organized by a gradient of difficulty.
Roaming Around the Known refers to the first
two weeks of a child's program in which the teacher explores the child's
known set of information and helps establish a working relationship, boost
the child's confidence, and share some reading and writing opportunities.
Running Records are a systematic notation system
of the teachers observations of the child's processing of new text.
Discontinued refers to the decision to exit
a child from the program based upon the readministered Observation Survey
scores. Also observations of the strategies used by the child during reading
and writing. Regular classroom performance is also taken into consideration.
Program Children are those who received sixty
or more lessons or who were successfully discontinued from the program
prior to having received sixty lessons.
Continuing Contact refers to inservice training
provided after the initial training year. All RR teachers in the
Northwest Tri-County Intermediate Unit meet approximately once a month
to observe and critique Behind the Glass lessons and to further their knowledge
and understanding of Reading Recovery aspects.
Behind the Glass refers to teaching an actual
lesson while being observed by peers through a one-way glass.
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