Efficacy of Supplemental Phonics-Based Instruction for Low-Skilled First Graders: How Language Minority Status and Pretest Characteristics Moderate Treatment Response

Bibliographic Data

Author(s)
Vadasy, P. F., & Sanders, E. A.
Year of Study
2011
We examined the efficacy of 20 weeks of individual supplemental phonics-based instruction for language minority (LM) and non-LM first graders. Students were designated LM if the primary home language was not English (otherwise non-LM). Those performing in the bottom half of their classroom LM/non-LM group in letter knowledge and phonological awareness were randomly assigned to treatment and control conditions. Treatment included alphabetics, decoding, and oral reading practice. Results showed that treatment students (n = 93) outperformed controls (n = 94) on 5 of the 6 posttests; however, LM students exhibited lower treatment response on passage reading fluency. Pretest word reading did not moderate treatment response, and LM students with greater baseline vocabulary showed greater treatment response on posttest word reading and spelling

Research Design

Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Student Randomized
Subject
Literacy
Grade Level(s)
1st Grade
Sample size
187
Effect Size
0.2

Program Details

Program Name

Sound Partners

Program Evaluated

Sound Partners

Tutor Type
Teaching assistant
Duration
1 year
Student-Tutor Ratio
1