December 4, 2002 | EDUCATION
WEEK
Study to Compare Six Reading-Intervention Strategies
By Kathleen Kennedy Manzo (Washington)
A major research
project set to kick off next year will compare the effectiveness
of remedial programs for struggling readers in the 3rd and 5th grades.
The privately financed
study, unveiled here last month at a meeting for foundation executives,
will follow the progress of more than 4,300 students over three years.
That will make it one of the largest studies to look at the impact
of specific reading interventions for youngsters in the later elementary
grades.
"The study will provide scientifically valid comparisons of the effectiveness
among major interventions currently in use," said Joseph K. Torgesen, a
professor of psychology and the director of the Florida Center for Reading Research
at Florida State University, in Tallahassee. Mr. Torgesen will be the principal
investigator on the project.
"This potentially
can be looked upon, if it succeeds, as a landmark study," he
said.
Mr. Torgesen has
teamed up with other prominent researchers: David E. Myers of Mathematica
Policy Research Inc. in Princeton, N.J., and George Bohrnstedt of
the Washington-based American Institutes for Research.
Pick Six
Researchers will track the academic fortunes of children, randomly selected
from six communities around the country, to determine which of six commercial
reading programs are effective in closing the achievement gap between
struggling readers and their peers.
The researchers
will ask publishers to submit programs that already have some evidence
of success and will ensure that the techniques selected are discernibly
different from one another in their approaches to teaching reading.
More than 500 children
will participate in each of the selected programs, which will be
taught for 70 minutes each school day for up to six months. The researchers
will also monitor a control group of more than 1,000 students who,
while they may get help with reading, will not undergo the selected
interventions.
Some experts praised
the effort, not only for its large scale and rigorous design, but
also as a model of how the private sector can bolster government
research initiatives. The study, called Power4Kids, is being underwritten
in part by the Haan Foundation for Children, a San Francisco-based
organization dedicated to finding solutions to educational problems.
"If we are
going to determine what is scientifically proven to work, we are
going to require substantially more research, and more than we can
do in the federal government," said G. Reid Lyon, director of
the child-development and -behavior branch of the National Institute
for Child Health and Human Development, which has financed reading
research. "It will complement what we're doing at NICHD."
But Timothy Shanahan,
a researcher and a member of the National Reading Panel, which reviewed
research in the field and issued an influential report in 2000, cautioned
that while the design of the upcoming study seems solid, it may not
be as useful as researchers hope.
"I guarantee
any program out there today is going to be redesigned by the time
results come out," he said. "But you can possibly pull
out lots of useful information about the specific features of the
programs."
© 2002 Editorial
Projects in Education
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