Bibliographic Data
Year of Study
2007
The Reading Rescue tutoring intervention model was investigated with 64 low-socioeconomic status, language-minority first graders with reading difficulties. School staff provided tutoring in phonological awareness, systematic phonics, vocabulary, fluency, and reading comprehension. Tutored students made significantly greater gains reading words and comprehending text than controls, who received a small-group intervention (d = 0.70) or neither intervention (d = 0.74). The majority of tutored students reached average reading levels whereas the majority of controls did not. Paraprofessionals tutored students as effectively as reading specialists except in skills benefiting nonword decoding. Paraprofessionals required more sessions to achieve equivalent gains. Contrary to conventional wisdom, results suggest that students make greater gains when they read text at an independent level than at an instructional level. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
Research Design
Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Quasi-experimental
Subject
Literacy
Grade Level(s)
1st Grade
Sample size
126
Effect Size
0.39
Program Details
Program Evaluated
Reading Rescue
Tutor Type
Teaching assistant
Duration
6 months
Student-Tutor Ratio
1