Teaching reading to poor readers in the intermediate grades: A comparison of text difficulty

Bibliographic Data

Author(s)
O'Connor, R. E., Bell, K. M., Harty, K. R., Larkin, L. K., Sackor, S. M., & Zigmond, N.
Year of Study
2002
The authors compared the influence of text difficulty--reading-level matched or grade-level matched--on the growth of poor readers' reading ability over 18 weeks of 1-to-1 tutoring. Forty-six 3rd-5th graders, including 25 with disabilities, were assigned randomly to 1 of 2 tutoring approaches or a control condition. Significant differences favored tutored children. Between approaches, the only significant difference was oral reading fluency, which favored students who read material at their reading level. Students who began with lower fluency made stronger gains in text matched to reading level; students with higher fluency profited from both treatments. When the 3 groups were combined, fluency was the strongest contributor to reading comprehension outcomes. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

Research Design

Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Randomized Controlled Trial
Subject
Literacy
Grade Level(s)
3rd Grade,
4th Grade,
5th Grade
Sample size
31
Effect Size
1.01

Program Details

Program Evaluated

Intervention for poor readers

Tutor Type
Teacher
Duration
18 weeks
Student-Tutor Ratio
1