Supplemental Fluency Intervention and Determinants of Reading Outcomes

Bibliographic Data

Author(s)
Vadasy, P. F., & Sanders, E. A.
Year of Study
2009
This study replicates research on the efficacy of a repeated reading intervention with word-level instruction for students in Grades 2 and 3 with low to moderate fluency skills, examines differences between treatment implementers, and tests unique contributions of treatment-related variables on outcomes. Students from 13 schools were randomly assigned to dyads; dyads were randomly assigned to treatment or control conditions. Schools were matched into treatment implementer groups (teachers or paraeducators) at study onset. Tutoring occurred during school hours for 15 weeks (M = 25.5 hr). Multilevel model results showed treatment students (n = 98) gained more than controls (n = 104) on measures of letter-sound knowledge (d = .41), fluency (d = .37–.38), and comprehension (d = .30–.31); students tutored by teachers gained more than their paraeducator-tutored peers on word reading and fluency. Finally, dyads tutored with greater fidelity gained more in word reading and fluency; dyads that read more complex words in their texts gained less on letter-sounds, fluency, and comprehension.

Research Design

Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Randomized Controlled Trial
Subject
Literacy
Grade Level(s)
2nd Grade,
3rd Grade
Sample size
153
Effect Size
0.13

Program Details

Program Evaluated

Repeated reading intervention with word-level instruction

Tutor Type
Teacher/Paraprofessional
Duration
15 weeks
Student-Tutor Ratio
2