Reading Recovery in the News - January-March 2008
JANUARY 2008
Outgoing YME superintendent proud of 34 years as educator
West Central Tribune, Willmar, MN
January 21, 2008
(Free registration required)
GRANITE FALLS — Retiring Yellow Medicine East School District
Superintendent Dwayne Strand says he’s enjoyed his work in education
during the past 34 years...
“We’ve had a board that’s really supported a lot of the initiatives.
They’ve been willing to put some money into programs that have been
good for kids: Reading Recovery certainly has been one of the
hallmark programs that we’re most proud of. That will continue,’’ he
said.
Bristol Charities’ Allocation of Funds for New Zealand Reading
Recovery Scheme at St Ursula’s
Bristol, United Kingdom
January 21, 2008
St Ursula’s School is delighted to announce it has been given
funding for the extended provision of the New Zealand Reading
Recovery Scheme.
North Drive teacher has second play published
Goldsboro News Argus, Goldsboro, NC
January 18,2 008
A reading teacher at North Drive Elementary School has had his
second children's script published.
..."Mr. Brown currently teaches Reading Recovery, Guided Reading,
and Readers Theater," she said. "His ability to create and apply
effective reading strategies and exercises helps his students become
excited about reading, while strengthening their reading abilities."
Australian Educators Learn from UMaine-Based Literacy Partnership
Coaches
University of Maine Email News, Orono, ME
January 11, 2008
ORONO – Five literacy educators from Queensland, Australia arrived
in Bangor this week to learn first-hand about the work that the
Maine Literacy Partnership (MLP) provides to Maine schools.
...The visit was arranged as a result of a relationship between Mary
Rosser, director for professional development and a UMaine trainer
for Reading Recovery within the College of Education and Human
development, and a former colleague who is part of the visiting
Australian team.
Mengerink, Morrow join VWCS board of ed
Times Bulletin, Van Wert, OH
January 10, 2008
Two VWCS teachers, Jennifer Arend and Donna Clark, gave an
educational impact presentation to the board about "Reading
Recovery," a short-term tutoring intervention program intended to
serve the lowest achieving (bottom 20 percent) first-grade students.
"Two years ago, the district looked at what we could do to make a
difference for kids who were struggling to read," said Schilb.
"Looking at the research, it became apparent that Reading Recovery
was a model that we were interested in implementing."
Arend and Clark reported the district has had "good success
rates" since implementing the program. During the first year of
implementation in VWCS, about 65 percent of students successfully
completed and exited the program.
It was also reported that research shows for every $3 dollars
invested in the program, $5 dollars is saved by not having to have
students remain in or be placed in other special education programs
or other special services.
FEBRUARY 2008
Inman Elementary earns state reading award for taking kids on
wonderful journey
Spartanburg Herald Journal, Spartanburg, SC
by Ashlei N. Stevens
March 3, 2008
Inman Elementary School was recently recognized with a statewide
Exemplary Reading Award. The literacy-based school serves 525 K-3
students including more than half who live in poverty and who are
still learning English. First graders who need extra help get
one-to-one tutoring through Reading Recovery.
Look Mom, I Can Read!
Shippensburg University Magazine, Shippensburg, PA
Winter 08.
Daniel Gomez
“What we wish to stress,” said Associate professor Janet
Bufalino, “is individual attention given to each student. …First
grade is our focus because this is a key developmental stage and
children benefit if they can catch up earlier in their schooling.”
To date, Bufalino has trained more than seventy teacher-leaders who
have in turn trained more than 2,000 Reading Recovery teachers –
affecting the lives of thousands of children. (Printable article)
MARCH 2008
Reading Recovery Recovers, Sort Of
The Literacy Professional
By Jack Cassady
Winter 2008, p. 3
Reading Recovery, an intensive one-on-one tutoring program for
struggling first graders, had fallen out of favor in recent years
because of its expense and (supposedly) because of the lack of
scientific evidence-based research on its effectiveness. Reportedly,
federal officials tried to discourage states and districts from
using Reading Recovery in schools that received federal Reading
First monies. However, the federal What Works Clearinghouse (also
dubbed the "nothing works" clearinghouse) found that Reading
Recovery was the only supplemental program of the 36 reviewed to
have positive effects across all four of the domains in the review -
alphabetics, fluency, comprehension, and general reading
achievement. The federal What Works Clearinghouse, which was formed
in 2002 to take the place of the ERIC clearinghouses, only sanctions
programs that have rigorous scientific research support.
Reading Recovery helps young readers thrive
Eccentric Newspaper, Livonia, MI
By Larry Ruehlen
March 27, 2008
Eric Gal, 6, once guessed at words he didn't know. Now he has all
kinds of ways to figure them out and he is having more fun reading.
"Everything was there for him, he just had to pull it all
together," said Lori Burke, a Reading Recovery teacher at Walled
Lake Consolidated Schools' Pleasant Lake Elementary in West
Bloomfield. "Now he's engaged in the story and laughs when he
reads."
Eric is one of dozens of children at the school who get extra
help through Reading Recovery. Developed in New Zealand 30 years
ago, Reading Recovery now also operates in most states in the U.S.
Lynn Mangold, Walled Lake's Reading Recovery coordinator, said the
program is paying big dividends as students get help early in their
educational careers that establishes the foundation for all future
learning.
Stafford names teachers of year
Asbury Park Press, Asbury Park, NJ
by Jessica Infante
March 27, 2008
STAFFORD — The township school district named Beth Bradley,
Bernadette Dreher, Johanna Gentleman, Erika Leming and Tracy Osborne
as 2007-08 Teachers of the Year on March 13.
Bradley is the Reading Recovery teacher at Oxycocus Elementary
School and has been teaching for nearly two decades; nine of them
have been in the township.
"This is my seventeenth year teaching," Bradley said. "I couldn't be
more honored."
She said one of the thrills of the award is that it comes from her
peers.
"Having your colleagues select you makes it that much more special,"
Bradley said. "It's the icing on the cake."
Randy Overbeck: Cuts for Reading Recovery don’t serve state’s
children
Dayton Daily News, Dayton, OH
By Randy Overbeck
March 24, 2008
In this commentary, a local school official questions the
priorities used by the Ohio Department of Education in making recent
budget cuts. While most cuts ranged from 3 to 4 percent, the Reading
Recovery training network was cut 20% for its first-year biennial
budget. Dr. Overbeck points out that Reading Recovery is the only
program to receive high marks from the U.S. Department of Education
What Works Clearinghouse, while programs with poor or no ratings
emerged unscathed.
“For those of us in the field – actually devoted to serving
children on the ground – this is but one more example of
questionable decision-making by the state superintendent and her
staff,” writes Dr. Overbeck.
Continuing Diane Holum's legacy
The Independent, Marshall, MN
by Deb Gau
March 24, 2008
GRANITE FALLS — Teachers in the Yellow Medicine East School District
were gathered for staff development on Thursday morning when they
received the news that fellow teacher Diane Holum had died. When
faced with the choice to take some time out or continue with staff
development, YME Elementary Principal Stacy Hinz said, they decided
to continue. It was what Ms. Holum would have wanted.
Minnesota educators and friends have created the Minnesota Literacy
Scholarship in honor of Diane Holum, a Reading Recovery teacher
leader. Ms. Holum, who died Wednesday after a fight with multiple
myeloma, was a mentor and trainer for many area teachers .
The Minnesota Literacy Scholarship will provide funds to allow
teachers to continue their professional development by attending the
National Reading Recovery & Classroom Literacy Conference.
Contributions can be made online by going to the
Reading Recovery Council of North America website. Enter
"Minnesota Literacy" in the special instructions sections to direct
the donation.
Ocean City approves $42M. school budget that hikes tax levy 4
percent
Press of Atlantic City, Atlantic City, NJ
March 20, 2008
The Ocean City school budget hearing included testimony from one
parent who spoke about Reading Recovery’s benefit for his children.
“That Reading-Recovery program has been essential in getting my
daughters on the right track with reading," he said as his
daughters, Nadia and Hanna Mae, looked on.
Community Business Briefs
Carroll County Comet, Delphi, IN
March 19, 2008
SHARON BROTHERS, a veteran teacher of the Delphi Community School
Corporation, was a panelist for a recent Educational Testing Service
national standard setting for reading. She was chosen for this
national panel when she was a first grade teacher and a Reading
Recovery teacher at Camden Elementary School.
During her time at Camden, she was instrumental in beginning the
Reading Recovery program and in assisting other teachers to
collaborate and build a consistently strong reading program. Her
efforts, along with those of the entire staff, led to 4-Star School
status for two years and qualifying scores in English/Language Arts
for two additional years.
Reading Recovery Grounds Successful Literacy Program in Live Oak
School District
Spotlight, Santa Cruz County Office of Education, CA, p. 3
By Bonnie Thurston
Winter, 2007
Nothing is more important to student achievement than high quality
teaching. Successful school districts invest in programs that
attract and retain excellent teachers. Live Oak School District has
worked for many years to bring theory and practice together through
teacher professional development, study groups, and coaching. At the
heart of the professional development program is the district’s
ongoing commitment to the Reading Recovery Training Program, an
early intervention program for struggling young readers who have
fallen behind their peers. Since 1994, Live Oak School District has
trained not only all Title I teachers and kindergarten teachers, but
also several first and second-grade teachers, special education
teachers, all three elementary principals, and even the
superintendent in Reading Recovery methods.
How Tutoring Fares Against NCLB
District Administration, p. 78
By Carla Thomas McClure
March 2008
The Research Corner analyzes the evidence for the effectiveness
of tutoring provided under NCLB and finds the research base is
small. The article notes Reading Recovery’s effectiveness.
“One-on-one tutoring is also integral to Reading Recovery, a
research-based program that targets the lowest-achieving readers in
first grade. In 2007 the What Works Clearinghouse gave the program a
rare thumbs-up: Based on five studies that met its standards for
rigor, the clearinghouse noted positive effects on general reading
achievement and alphabetic skills and potentially positive effects
on fluency and comprehension.”
Teachers' efforts recognized
Tri City Herald, Kennewick, WA
by Herald staff
March 13, 2008
Dora Noble, a Reading Recovery teacher and literacy coach at Robert
Frost Elementary School in Pasco, Washington is one of ten winners
to receive a Crystal Apple Award. She was the first teacher in Pasco
to earn national Board Certification and is an executive member of
the Washington State Educators Standards Board. The honorees are
selected from a pool of nominees submitted by educators and
community members. They get crystal apples, $1,000, and other
prizes. Ten educators from the Mid-Columbia will be honored today
with Crystal Apple awards for going the extra mile for their
students.
Jordan Creek effort helps with reading
DesMoinesRegister.com, Des Moines, IA
By Micholyn Fajen
March 13, 2008
Jordan Creek Elementary School is testing a pilot of the Reading
Recovery program to help students on the journey to lifelong reading
success.
The early intervention reading program for first-graders is used in
several schools in the metro area. The West Des Moines school
district is training five teachers to assist students who need a
boost.
Reading Recovery program to be restored
Allentown Morning Call, Allentown, PA
by Steve Esack
March 6, 2008
The Bethlehem Area School administration said Tuesday that it
would be restoring Reading Recovery, a short-term, one-to-one
reading intervention program for first-graders. But to save the
licensed program, which costs $680,424, the district may have to
make slight staffing changes to some of the 40 trained Reading
Recovery teachers, said Mary Katona, assistant to the superintendent
for curriculum and instruction.
Joanne LoFaso, one of the district's literacy and English language
arts coordinators, was happy the district was keeping Reading
Recovery.
Ingram teacher honored by Chamber
Kerrville Daily Times, Kerrville, TX
by Jeff Wright
March 4, 2008
Every school day for the past 12 years, Cindy Faust has taught
Ingram Elementary students to be better readers and writers.
She spends lots of one-on-one time with first- and second-graders as
part of an intensive, 20-week Reading Recovery Program.
“She can help you with reading and writing. ... She helps us say the
words,” said one first-grader named Kelby.
Cindy recently was named 2007 Outstanding Educator of the Year by
the West Kerr County Chamber of Commerce.
Support group's contribution to area students is very much
appreciated
The Tennessean, Nashville, TN
by Jill Speering
March 4, 2008
Matthew had difficulty learning to read and write. After he repeated
kindergarten and spent a half-year in first grade, his private
school suggested further testing for special education.
Matthew's dad felt hopeless; but he enrolled Matthew in a Metro
school, and within a month, Matthew began Reading Recovery, a
first-grade intervention program for students who have difficulty
learning to read and write.
After 20 weeks of individualized instruction that continued through
the summer, Matthew tested at grade level in reading by the
beginning of second grade. Today, Matthew continues to read at grade
level in third grade.
Inman Elementary earns state reading award for taking kids on
wonderful journey
Spartanburg Herald Journal, Spartanburg, SC
by Ashlei N. Stevens
March 3, 2008
Inman Elementary School was recently recognized with a statewide
Exemplary Reading Award. The literacy-based school serves 525 K-3
students including more than half who live in poverty and who are
still learning English. First graders who need extra help get
one-to-one tutoring through Reading Recovery.
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