Fostering Student Independent Behaviors During Reading Recovery Lessons

This instructional study of fostering student independence while teaching them to read revealed how first grade students develop independent reading behaviors during their 18-22 weeks of instruction. The observations were made of three Reading Recovery teacher/student dyad behaviors during three vid...

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Main Author: Robinson, Nancy Reed
Other Authors: Teaching and Learning
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27163
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04232003-115317/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-271632020-09-26T05:33:04Z Fostering Student Independent Behaviors During Reading Recovery Lessons Robinson, Nancy Reed Teaching and Learning Niles, Jerome A. McDowell, Gloria M. Lalik, Rosary V. Hutson, Barbara A. Smith-Burke, Margaret T. Independent Dyad Instruction Reading Recovery Instructional Interaction Fostering Independence This instructional study of fostering student independence while teaching them to read revealed how first grade students develop independent reading behaviors during their 18-22 weeks of instruction. The observations were made of three Reading Recovery teacher/student dyad behaviors during three videotaped lessons; one in the beginning of instruction, one near the middle of instruction and the last just before the students discontinued from their respective programs. Individual units of reading behaviors were identified and labeled as assisted, assisted dependent, assisted independent, or independent based on specific behaviors observed when miscues occurred. The questions guiding the study were directed at student behaviors, teacher behaviors, and student changes over time. The data collected comprised transcripts of the taped sessions, daily lesson plans, running records, and results from scheduled Observation Survey assessments. The concept of independence was discussed as (1) a disposition for independence, (2) functional independence, (3) independence as a self-regulatory behavior, and (4) examples of how children contribute to and extend their learning independently. When they began, the students, Title I students, were among the bottom 10% of readers in their classrooms. When they discontinued (graduated), they functioned as average readers in their classrooms. When the students were assessed again in June after Reading Recovery lessons had ended, they had maintained their gains. In addition each student had acquired an expanding disposition of independence that is expected to be maintained as learning continued. The findings suggest that fostering independence in tutorial settings accelerates learning and enables students to become average readers. Ed. D. 2014-03-14T20:10:32Z 2014-03-14T20:10:32Z 2003-02-14 2003-04-23 2004-04-29 2003-04-29 Dissertation etd-04232003-115317 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27163 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04232003-115317/ Chapter3.pdf References.pdf FrontMatter.pdf chapter1.pdf Chapter2.pdf Chapter6.pdf Appendices.pdf Chapter5.pdf Chapter4.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Independent
Dyad Instruction
Reading Recovery
Instructional Interaction
Fostering Independence
spellingShingle Independent
Dyad Instruction
Reading Recovery
Instructional Interaction
Fostering Independence
Robinson, Nancy Reed
Fostering Student Independent Behaviors During Reading Recovery Lessons
description This instructional study of fostering student independence while teaching them to read revealed how first grade students develop independent reading behaviors during their 18-22 weeks of instruction. The observations were made of three Reading Recovery teacher/student dyad behaviors during three videotaped lessons; one in the beginning of instruction, one near the middle of instruction and the last just before the students discontinued from their respective programs. Individual units of reading behaviors were identified and labeled as assisted, assisted dependent, assisted independent, or independent based on specific behaviors observed when miscues occurred. The questions guiding the study were directed at student behaviors, teacher behaviors, and student changes over time. The data collected comprised transcripts of the taped sessions, daily lesson plans, running records, and results from scheduled Observation Survey assessments. The concept of independence was discussed as (1) a disposition for independence, (2) functional independence, (3) independence as a self-regulatory behavior, and (4) examples of how children contribute to and extend their learning independently. When they began, the students, Title I students, were among the bottom 10% of readers in their classrooms. When they discontinued (graduated), they functioned as average readers in their classrooms. When the students were assessed again in June after Reading Recovery lessons had ended, they had maintained their gains. In addition each student had acquired an expanding disposition of independence that is expected to be maintained as learning continued. The findings suggest that fostering independence in tutorial settings accelerates learning and enables students to become average readers. === Ed. D.
author2 Teaching and Learning
author_facet Teaching and Learning
Robinson, Nancy Reed
author Robinson, Nancy Reed
author_sort Robinson, Nancy Reed
title Fostering Student Independent Behaviors During Reading Recovery Lessons
title_short Fostering Student Independent Behaviors During Reading Recovery Lessons
title_full Fostering Student Independent Behaviors During Reading Recovery Lessons
title_fullStr Fostering Student Independent Behaviors During Reading Recovery Lessons
title_full_unstemmed Fostering Student Independent Behaviors During Reading Recovery Lessons
title_sort fostering student independent behaviors during reading recovery lessons
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27163
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04232003-115317/
work_keys_str_mv AT robinsonnancyreed fosteringstudentindependentbehaviorsduringreadingrecoverylessons
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