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OR Reading First: Review of Comprehensive Programs. Objective of Reading First.
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Objective of Reading First (1) “To provide assistance to State educational agencies and local educational agencies in establishing reading programs for students in kindergarten through grade 3 that are based on scientifically based reading research to ensure that every studentcan read at grade level or above not later than the end of grade 3.” • NCLB, 2001, Part B, Sec. 1201.
Why Focus on Reading Programs Now • Unprecedented convergence about what children need to be successful readers • National syntheses provide scientific evidence on which to base practice • Much classroom practice is shaped by textbooks • State standards are embracing the science • Publishers respond to the marketplace and need • Window of opportunity to align what we know, what we use, and how we teach to attain critical results
Comprehensive Reading Programs • Purpose: • to provide sufficient instruction in the core components of reading (enough of the “right stuff” in a systematic design) • to provide instruction that enables the majority of students to meet or exceed grade-level standards on all the key Reading First elements • to serve as the primary reading program for a school within and between grades (K-3)
Why Adopt A Comprehensive Reading Program? • Increases continuity, coherence, and community of effort within and between grades (all teachers are aware and working toward the same goals) • Creates more “buying power” regarding professional development • Affords greater differentiation of instruction for children (can share children within and between grades) • Reading instruction is rocket science (Moats, 1999) and expecting teachers to construct and instruct is unreasonable and too important to leave to chance.
Oregon Reading First Curriculum Review • Focus: Comprehensive reading programs • Purpose: To determine alignment with SBRR & provide consumers guidance • Curriculum Review Panel • Tool/Criteria: Consumer’s Guide (Simmons & Kame’enui) • Review Process
Curriculum Review Panel: Selection of Members • Former State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Stan Bunn, invited 25 educators across the state to serve on the Curriculum Review Panel. • 5 additional members from the U of O, Eugene Research Institute, and Oregon Research Institute and 3 members from ODE were identified in Oregon’s Reading First grant.
Curriculum Review Panel: 17 final members • 2 district administrators • 2 district curriculum specialists • 1 classroom teacher • 4 university faculty from three state universities (U of O, Pacific, Univ. of Portland) • 2 doctoral students from the U of O • 4 researchers from ERI • 1 researcher from ORI • 1 educational specialist from ODE
Oregon Reading First Curriculum Review Panel Members • Julie Anderson Educational Specialist/English Language Arts, ODE • Scott Baker, Ph.D Researcher, Eugene Research Institute • Lynette Doht Reading Specialist, Portland Public Schools • Hank Fien Research Assistant, University of Oregon • Barbara Gunn, Ph.D Researcher, Oregon Research Institute • Arlene Hett, Ph.D Director of Teacher Education, University of Portland • Sara Johnson Principal, Henry L. Slater Elementary School • Edward J. Kame’enui , Ph.D Professor, University of Oregon • Kristen MacConnell Research Assistant, University of Oregon • Anita McClain, Ph. D Professor, Pacific University • Janet Otterstedt Research Assistant, Eugene Research Institute • Sandra Pellens, Ph.D Director of Instruction, Molalla River SD 35 • Michael Rebar, Ph.D Researcher, Eugene Research Instiitute • Deborah C. Simmons, Ph.D Professor, University of Oregon • Sylvia Smith, Ph.D Researcher, Eugene Research Institute • Carrie Thomas-Beck, Ph.D Curriculum Specialist, Springfield SD 19 • Deborah White Teacher of the Year, Lyle Elementary School
TOOL: Consumer’s Guide to Evaluating a Core Reading Program • Developers: Drs.Deborah C. Simmons and Edward J. Kame’enui, University of Oregon • Why Developed: To assist states, districts and schools in the selection of research-based tools • When Developed: As part of National Center to Improve the Tools of Educators’ scope of work (1990-2000) • Purpose: To document and quantify the design and delivery features of core reading programs.
Consumer’s Guide: Organization • Programs Evaluated by Grade • Within Grade by Essential Component: • Phonemic Awareness • Phonics • Fluency • Vocabulary • Comprehension
Consumer’s Guide:Organization (cont.) • For each Essential Component: • High Priority Items • Discretionary Items • Overarching Design Items for Each Grade
Consumer’s Guide:Sample Items • KINDERGARTEN • Phonemic Awareness • High Priority Items: • #1 Progresses from the easier phonemic awareness activities to more difficult (e.g., isolation, blending, segmentation, and manipulation) (ss) • #2 Teaches skills explicitly and systematically (w) • #4 Integrates letter-sound correspondence instruction to phonological awareness (w) • #5 Focuses on segmentation or the combination of blending and segmenting for greatest transfer (ss)
Consumer’s Guide:Sample Items • KINDERGARTEN • Phonemic Awareness • Discretionary Items: • #1 Focuses beginning instruction on the phonemic level of phonological units with short words (two to three phonemes; e.g., at, mud, run) • #3 Focuses first on the initial sound (sat), then on the final sound (sat), and lastly on the medial sound (sat) in words.
Consumer’s Guide:Sample Items • KINDERGARTEN • Design Features • 1. Coordinates and integrates phonemic awareness and phonics instruction and student materials. • 2. Provides ample practice on high-priority skills. • 3. Provides explicit and systematic instruction. • 4. Includes systematic and cumulative review of high priority skills. • 5. Demonstrates and builds relationships between fundamental skills leading to higher order skills.
Scoring Criteria Use the following criteria to score each item: • = Program consistently meets/exceeds criterion • = Program partially meets/exceeds criterion • = Program does not satisfy the criterion When evaluating individual elements, slash ( / ) the respective circle that represents your rating (e.g., ).
Review Process • Announcement posted on Oregon Reading First and WOATRA’s websites inviting publishers to submit core reading programs for review. (February 14, 2003 deadline for submissions)
Call for Comprehensive Programs Comprehensive Programs: • (a) include materials for all grades K-3, • (b) comprehensively address the “five essential components” of the Reading first legislation in scientifically based beginning reading instruction: phonemic awareness, phonics, reading fluency, vocabulary, and reading comprehension.
Comprehensive Programs Reviewed: • 15 programs submitted / 9 reviewed as comprehensive programs: • Harcourt • Houghton-Mifflin • Macmillan/McGraw-Hill • Open Court • Reading Mastery • Rigby • Scott Foresman • Success For All • Wright Group
Review Process: Program Assignment • OR CRP members provided with 6 hours of training by OR RF staff (February 21, 2003) • CRP members randomly assigned to programs to review. • Each reviewer assigned to either a K/1 or 2/3 grade. No reviewer evaluated an entire program K-3. • Each member reviewed 1 to 4 programs based on availability. • CRP members were not permitted to review any program for which they were an author, consultant, or advisor. (Reviewers signed statements of disclosure.) • Initial review completed March to May, 2003.
Review Process: • Each section of a program (K/1 or 2/3) was reviewed by 2 independent reviewers. • The same two reviewers were never paired more than once. • Thus, each program was reviewed by 4 different members of the review panel. • Members spent from 8 to 30 hours to complete a program assignment (K/1 or 2/3) • All review work was completed at the OR Reading First Center.
Review Process:Reliability Between Reviewers • Upon completion of the review, scores between the two reviewers were compared. • Each rating was assigned a point value: • = 2 points • = 1 point • = 0 points • Items that were off by one were averaged (e.g. full circle and partial circle = 1.5) • For items that were off by more than one (e.g. full circle and empty circle), a third reviewer was asked to reconcile the items.
Review Process:Third Reviewer • Third reviewers assigned to “reconcile” did not conduct the initial review of the program. • Third reviewers examined the documented evidence from the 2 initial reviewers and the program materials to determine which of the two scores best represented the selected item as the final score.
Review Process:Summarizing Results • Result of the review process is one averaged/ rectified score for each item for a program. • Final Report includes a completed Consumer’s Guide for each program (item by item). • Final Report summarizes results by program, by essential components, and by grade. • For each program, results are summarized by high priority, discretionary, and design items.
Final Report:Sample Consumer’s Guide (cont.) • Kindergarten Phonemic Awareness Instruction - High Priority • Tally the number of elements with each rating. • 22 + 1 __ + __ • (2 pts) (1.5 pts) (1 pt) (.5 pts) (0 pts) • Total Points/Total Possible Points 8/10 = 80%
Next Steps • Final report distributed to districts, schools, and publishers for guidance in program selection at IBR I in June 2003. • Final report discussed in detail on Day 3 of IBR I. • Programs will be on display throughout the four days of IBR I for school staff to examine. • Schools will need to allot their professional development funds to pay a team of educators to examine the programs more closely during the last week of June.
Next Steps (cont.) • Schools will need to notify ODE of their program selection by early July to secure approval then order materials. • Schools will select those programs that were reviewed favorably by Oregon’s RF Curriculum Review Panel. • Schools will then need to arrange for professional development on their new program early in the fall.