| Literature DB >> 26779296 |
Carolyn A Denton1, Jack M Fletcher2, W Pat Taylor2, Amy E Barth3, Sharon Vaughn4.
Abstract
Considerable research evidence supports the provision of explicit instruction for students at risk for reading difficulties; however, one of the most widely implemented approaches to early reading instruction is Guided Reading (GR; Fountas & Pinnel, 1996), which deemphasizes explicit instruction and practice of reading skills in favor of extended time reading text. This study evaluated the two approaches in the context of supplemental intervention for at-risk readers at the end of Grade 1. Students (n = 218) were randomly assigned to receive GR intervention, explicit intervention (EX), or typical school instruction (TSI). Both intervention groups performed significantly better than TSI on untimed word identification. Significant effects favored EX over TSI on phonemic decoding and one measure of comprehension. Outcomes for the intervention groups did not differ significantly from each other; however, an analysis of the added value of providing each intervention relative to expected growth with typical instruction indicated that EX is more likely to substantially accelerate student progress in phonemic decoding, text reading fluency, and reading comprehension than GR. Implications for selection of Tier 2 interventions within a response-to-intervention format are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Reading intervention; early intervention; explicit instruction; guided reading
Year: 2014 PMID: 26779296 PMCID: PMC4712689 DOI: 10.1080/19345747.2014.906010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Res Educ Eff