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            Do You Know Any 
            Schools That Are Using Reading Research  
            to Improve Reading?  
            by 
            Suzanne Heath, Research Editor, Wrightslaw 
          Print 
            this page 
          Jimmy 
            Kilpatrick, publisher of EducationNews, 
            asks:  
             
           
            "Do you know of any school in the nation that has adopted 
            and used successfully the NIH research in reading? If so, have these 
            schools addressed the needs of kids in the bottom 20%?"  
             
            "Although advocates for children with disabilities and U. S. 
            Department of Education want to bring this into reality, it seems 
            that nothing is changing."  
             
            Sue Heath, research editor for Wrightslaw, replies:  
             
            Things are changing. No Child Left Behind is attempting to address 
            reading problems by requiring states to use federal funds on research-based 
            reading programs.  
             
            When Congress reauthorized NCLB in 2002, they added the legal definitions 
            of reading, 
            essential 
            components of reading instruction, scientifically 
            based reading research, and diagnostic 
            reading assessment to the law. (See 4 
            Great Definitions about Reading in No Child Left Behind) 
          
            Teachers 
              Trained in Research Based Methods  
               
              Children at the bottom 20th percentile in reading cannot learn to 
              read when they are taught by teachers who are not trained to teach 
              reading.  
               
              These children need teachers who are trained in research based methods 
              and know how to teach the esssential 
              components of reading instruction to a level of mastery for 
              each student. These teachers must also know how to tailor instruction 
              so it addresses each individual child's stage 
              of reading, not the child's grade or age level.  
               
              Teacher 
              Colleges Do Not Prepare Teachers  
                
              Few, if any, teacher's colleges in the United States are training 
              teachers in even one research based method of reading instruction. 
              State teacher certification 
              requirements do not require elementary teachers or special education 
              teachers to be trained in even one research based method 
              of reading instruction.  
               
              Training in Research Based Methods 
               
              The problem is not that the training is unavailable. Colleges, hospitals, 
              and clinics around the country offer training 
              in research based methods of reading instruction.  
               
              The problem is that school districts do not require the training 
              as a condition of employment. States do not require the training 
              as a condition of certification. Teachers colleges do not 
              require the training as a condition of graduation. 
               
              Taxpayers, parents, teachers, administrators, school board members, 
              and legislators who want better outcomes for students need to look 
              at the teacher training and certification process. 
               
              This system may have been adequate when we were satisfied to allow 
              the bottom 30% [ xxxx PowerPoint USDOE graphs linked here] of students 
              go through school without learning to read. The system is not adequate 
              if we expect to produce a literate workforce. The system is not 
              adequate if we expect to raise our abysmal school outcomes. Insert 
              graphs 
             
                
                    
               
              The system is not adequate when we have the knowledge and programs 
              available to teach virtually all children to read fluently at grade 
              level. 
               
              INSERT something about pervasive belief that many kids can't learn 
              and schools don't try to teach them.  
           
        
       
      
      
        
          Reading 
            Proficiency & Impact of NCLB 
             
            Here are links to two recent reports on reading proficiency in high 
            poverty schools and the impact of No Child Left Behind. They will 
            you an idea of what is changing, where, and to what degree. There 
            are more reports available - these are just two that I have handy. 
             
            Inside 
            the Black Box of High-Performing High Poverty Schools (February 
            2005) This study looks at a group of high- poverty, high-performing 
            schools in Kentucky to determine how they broke the pattern of low 
            achievement. The lessons from these schools can help other educators 
            who face similar challenges. 
             
            The Impact of 
            the No Child Left Behind Act on Student Achievement and Growth: 2005 
            Edition (April 2005) A national research project indicates that 
            student achievement has improved since No Child Left Behind (NCLB) 
            was implemented, but student growth has declined slightly. Unless 
            teaching and learning improves, schools will not reach the requirement 
            of 100 percent proficiency by 2014. The study also evaluated achievement 
            gaps among ethnic groups. 
           
             
 
 
  
    Meet Sue Whitney  
       
      Sue Whitney of  Manchester, New Hampshire, works with families as a special education advocate and is the research editor for Wrightslaw.
  
      
    In Doing Your Homework, Suzanne Whitney gives savvy advice about reading, research based instruction, and creative strategies for using education standards to  advocate for children and to improve public schools.  
 
Her articles have been reprinted by SchwabLearning.org, EducationNews.org, Bridges4Kids.org, The Beacon: Journal of Special Education Law and Practice, the Schafer Autism Report, and have been used in CLE presentations to attorneys. 
       
Sue is the co-author of Wrightslaw: No Child Left Behind (ISBN: 978-1-892320-12-4) that was
published by Harbor House Law Press, Inc. 
 
She also served on New Hampshire's Special Education State Advisory Committee on the Education of Students/Children with Disabilities (SAC).
  
        
Sue Whitney's bio. 
         
    
Copyright  © 2002-2022 by Suzanne Whitney.
        
           
           
            
             
        
       
      
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