#RB-SP-B05 Sound Partners Research Base
Research Base for Sound Partners Introduction Large numbers of students have reading problems that threaten their school success. In 2000, 37 percent of fourth graders performed below the basic level of reading achievement on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) reading test (Donahue et al., 2001). Schools across the U.S. are struggling with how to best teach reading to students with learning difficulties. Research on the long-term consequences of reading difficulties supports early identification and intervention for poor readers. Students who are poor readers in first-grade are almost certain to remain poor readers at the end of fourth grade (Juel, 1988), and first-grade reading achievement strongly predicts 11 th- grade reading achievement (Cunningham & Stanovich, 1997). When students at risk for reading failure are identified early and provided with intensive, explicit instruction, schools can reduce the number of students who are identified with reading disabilities (Dickson & Bursuck, 1999; O Connor, 2000). Many schools lack the teacher resources to provide the intensive, individual reading assistance needed by these struggling beginning readers. Schools often look to non-teacher tutors to meet this need. Mounting evidence supports the efficacy of well-designed tutoring interventions for beginning readers. One area of research identifies features of effective tutoring in early reading skills, including: (a) direct letter-sound instruction, (b) reading in texts that introduce words with spelling patterns previously taught in phonics instruction, (c) intensity of intervention, (d) use of lesson plans, (e) phonics-based word study, and (f) writing (Invernizzi, Rosemary, Juel, & Richards, 1997: Juel, 1996). Wasik s (1998) review indicated that effective volunteer tutoring programs feature structured tutoring sessions with instruction in letter-sound relations, writing, word analysis, reading and rereading text, and tutor training. A meta-analysis (Elbaum, Vaughn, Hughes, & Moody, 2000) of 29 treatmentcontrol studies of one-to-one tutoring programs for elementary students at-risk for reading failure, identified characteristics of effective programs, including trained tutors. Interventions for younger students were more effective than interventions serving older students. Sound Partners is a supplementary program supported by rigorous evidence on early reading intervention, including effective tutoring instruction. Sound Partners targets beginning readers, when tutoring interventions are found to be most effective. The one-on-one tutoring approach is a highly effective means of helping students who struggle with reading (Cohen, Kulik, & Kulik, 1982; Juel, 1996; Wasik, 1998; Wasik & Slavin, 1993). The tutoring lessons reflect principles of effective instructional design, and guided learning and practice. Research and instructional principles that support the major components of the Sound Partners program are described below. 2
Research Rationale Instructional Design Sound Partners possesses several features of good instructional design for students encountering challenges and problems in learning to read: Mediated scaffolding- Tutor training addresses the need for mediated scaffolding to adjust instructional support for individual student needs (Gunn, Simmons, & Kameenui, 1998). Strategic integration- Instructional components are linked to help students make connections between areas of literacy knowledge. For example, letter-sound correspondence is integrated with phonemic decoding and encoding; letter-sound correspondence is linked with storybook reading (Dixon, Carnine, & Kameenui, 1992). Judicious review- The lessons have been field tested and designed to provide adequate review for students with a range of reading needs. Each lesson component provides repeated opportunities to practice discrete skills that students are learning (e.g., letter-sound correspondences, phonemic segmentation, phonemic decoding) (Dixon, Carnine, & Kameenui, 1992; Kameenui & Carnine, 1989). The individual lesson components offer ample opportunities for word identification in (a) context-free, as well as connected text, conditions (Juel, 1989; Stanovich, 1980); (b) carefully selected storybooks with a low rate of introduction of novel words (Barr, 1984; Gambrell, Wilson, & Gantt, 1981) to increase motivation and minimize error rates which influence reading progress; (c) varied contexts for word recognition practice, to avoid drill and to promote transfer of writing/spelling skills in various situations (Walker & Buckley, 1972); (d) task variation and pacing through short skill sessions within lessons and changes in tasks over the course of the intervention, to decrease boredom and promote motivation (Friedman & Medway, 1987; Samuels, 1988); (e) explicit correction procedures for tutors to follow; and (f) ongoing systems for student progress feedback, as well as metacognitive reminders to increase student awareness of task purpose and applications (Cunningham, 1990). Lesson Component: Letter-Sound/Beginning Sound Instruction Letter recognition is the best predictor of beginning reading achievement (Bond & Dykstra, 1967; Chall, 1967), and speed and fluency in naming letters strongly correlate with beginning reading achievement (Biemiller, 1977-78; Blachman, 1984). Even before students begin to read, they use their knowledge of letter names to learn the links between phonemes and graphemes (Treiman & Rodriguez, 1999; Treiman, Weatherston, & Berch, 1994), and to learn letter sounds (Treiman, Tincoff, Rodriguez, Mouzaki, & Francis, 1998). Effective instruction in the alphabetic principle includes modeling of individual letter sounds by the teacher that is repeated by the student (Ball & Blachman, 1991; Byrne & Fielding-Barnsley, 1989; Cunningham, 1990; Lie, 1991; Lundberg, Frost, & Petersen, 1988; 3
O Connor, Jenkins, Leicester, & Slocum, 1992; Smith, Simmons, & Kameenui, 1998). Research suggests that letter-sound instruction should feature: (a) instruction of the most common sounds for the consonants and vowels, (b) introduction of the most common letter sounds before less common letter sounds, (c) separation in time of introduction of letters and sounds that are easily confused, and (d) focus on use of lower case letters. Foorman, Francis, Novy, and Liberman (1991) found that the amount of letter-sound instruction is related to first graders' reading and spelling individual growth curve analysis showed that children with more letter-sound instruction had higher growth rates for reading regular and exception words. Research supports the benefits of combining phonological awareness instruction and lettersound correspondence instruction (Adams, 1990; Ball & Blachman, 1991; Byrne & Fielding-Barnsley, 1989, 1991; Ehri & McCormick, 1998; Foorman et al., 1997; National Reading Panel, 2000; Simmons & Kameenui, 1998; Stanovich, 1986; Vandervelden & Siegel, 1997; Vellutino, 1991). Sound Partners includes explicit instruction in letter-sound relationships at a reasonable pace and sequence (introducing from two to four letter-sound relationships per week). High utility letter-sound relationships are taught early in the program, permitting students to read words quickly. Visually and aurally similar sounds and letters are not introduced simultaneously. Letter-sound instruction is followed by a phonemic awareness activity. Lesson Component: Phoneme Segmenting A body of research suggests that phonemic segmentation is a strong predictor of beginning reading (Muter, Hulme, Snowling, & Taylor, 1997; Kaminski & Good, 1996; O Connor & Jenkins, 1999; Snider, 1997; Spector, 1992, Wagner, Torgesen, Rashotte, Hecht, Barker, et al., 1997; Yopp, 1988). Both the standard Reading Recovery and Iversen and Tumner's (1993) modified Reading Recovery group utilized the Elkonin (1973) sound boxes to teach children to isolate onset and rime portions of words, a phonological awareness skill that helps students discover the alphabetic principle (Goswami & Bryant, 1992; Bowey & Francis, 1991; Treiman, 1991). Iversen and Tumner (1993) hypothesized that higher use of this segmenting technique in their U.S. study accounted for greater progress in phonemic segmentation skills attained by the U.S. Reading Recovery group versus their New Zealand group. Levy, Bourassa, and Horn (1999) found that poor readers showed the best generalization to reading new words and non-words when they were taught to read words using phoneme segmentation, rather than whole word or onset-rime word reading methods. Ball and Blachman s (1991) research supports the modeling of sounds together with a concrete representation of phonemes in a word: Sound Partners provides a sequence of instruction in phoneme segmenting that begins with segmenting three-phoneme (consonant-vowel-consonant) words, and progresses to four-phoneme words with consonant blends. The lessons use visual cues to help students understand how to segment phonemes by pointing to an 4
Elkonin box (a graphic box divided into three or four parts to which the student points when segmenting, putting only one sound in each box). Lesson Component: Phoneme Blending Phonological synthesis, or blending, is the ability to combine individual phonemes to make a word, and children's performance on this task is highly correlated with their early reading skills (Fox & Routh, 1984; Torgesen, Morgan, & Davis, 1992). Research supports instruction that integrates letter-sound correspondence and phonological awareness instruction (Davidson & Jenkins, 1994; Fox & Routh, 1984; O Connor, Jenkins, & Slocum, 1995; Oudeans, 2003), and that includes both phoneme segmenting and phoneme blending (Ball & Blachman, 1988, 1991; Davidson & Jenkins, 1994; Fox & Routh, 1984; Torgesen, Morgan, & Davis, 1992). Fuchs et al. (2001) demonstrated the benefits of combined phonological awareness and decoding instruction on spelling and word reading measures. Oudeans (2003) research supports an integrated sequence for linking letter-sound instruction with instruction in phoneme blending and segmenting that involves print: The phoneme blending activities in Sound Partners incorporate the following features of research-based design: use of words that include the most common letter sounds; use of words that include only letters that have been previously introduced; explicit tutor instruction in connections between letter sound instruction and blending tasks; and, storybook exposure to words that include only or primarily previously introduced letters (Chard, Simmons, & Kameenui, 1998). Blending begins with continuous sounds that are easier to blend than stop sounds. Visual cues (an arrow under the word) are provided when the student is first learning to blend the sounds. Tutors are trained to have the student blend the sounds continuously (stretch them out) rather than stop between sounds, so that students are most likely to recognize the blended word. Lesson Component: Written Spelling Practice Pre-readers who are trained to segment and spell become better at reading unfamiliar words and segmenting and spelling than controls (Ehri & Wilce, 1987). Instruction that helps children internalize spelling, including invented spelling, helps children become aware of sounds and spellings of words (Ehri, 1989). O'Connor and Jenkins (1995) found that adding spelling instruction to code-based reading instruction for kindergartners with developmental delays significantly improved their spelling and word reading in comparison to a control group. This suggests that children most at-risk for reading failure may need the explicit instruction in the alphabetic principle that spelling tasks provide. Research supports the benefits of explicit, intense instruction, practice in letter-sound correspondence and application to decoding and spelling for the students most in need of extra instruction (Blachman, 1994; Felton, 1993; Lovett, 1994). Even with very young writers, there is evidence (Clarke, 1989; Ehri, 1988; Liberman, Rubin, Duques, & Carlisle, 1985; Treiman, 1985) that their use of invented spelling in writing contributes to their phonemic awareness and understanding of the alphabetic 5
principle the greatest benefits accrue to low performing students. Training studies indicate that the motor act of writing contributes to superior spelling performance compared to use of letter tiles or computer (Cunningham & Stanovich, 1990; Hulme & Bradley, 1984): Similar to the design of the blending activities, the Sound Partners spelling activities reflect the following research-based features: use of spelling words that include the most common letter sounds; words that include only previously taught letters; and, tutor integration of letter-sound and phoneme-segmenting practice to support spelling (Chard, Simmons, & Kameenui, 1998). Tutors are trained to reinforce students phonetic spellings and to scaffold student spelling of difficult sounds. All spelling tasks are completed with pencil and paper. Later lessons that introduce two-letter combinations (blends, digraphs, vowel teams) include instruction and tutor guidance to help students become aware of these highly regular spelling patterns in written English. Tutors remind students to re-read all of their written words. Lesson Component: Storybook Reading in Decodable Texts Many training studies have clearly demonstrated that the most powerful early reading interventions feature training in phonological and phonics skills in combination with opportunities to apply these skills to the reading task (Ball & Blachman, 1991; Blachman, Tangel, Ball, Black, & McGraw, 1999; Foorman, Francis, Fletcher, Schatschneider, & Mehta, 1998; Fuchs, Fuchs, et al., 2001; Hatcher, Hulme, & Ellis, 1994; Mathes, Howard, Allen, & Fuchs, 1998; O Connor, Fulmer, Harty, & Bell, 2001; Slavin, Madden, Karweit, Livermon, & Dolan, 1990; Torgesen et al., 1999). Research on features of effective reading instruction suggests that exemplary teachers select text to match student needs (Allington, 2002; Rankin-Erickson, & Pressley, 2000). In her study of third- through fifth-grade students with low reading skills, O Connor (2002) found that students tutored with texts matched to their reading ability gained more in word reading, decoding, and fluency skills as compared to students tutored with grade-level texts. Chard, Simmons, and Kameenui (1998) recommended that research-based instruction in word recognition integrate phonological recoding of words into storybook reading as early as possible. Further, research suggests the value of decodable text for this reading practice, particularly during the initial stage of reading acquisition when it supports practicing letter-sound connections (Foorman, Fletcher, & Francis, 1997). Juel and Roper- Schneider (1985) reported that students in a decodable text group developed significantly stronger decoding skill and read more words not directly taught in the basal series as compared to students who used a basal series that featured high frequency words and more irregular words. Mesmer (in press) found that text decodability supported the application of letter-sound relations for first graders at the partial alphabetic stage of word recognition and enabled students to progress to the full alphabetic phase (Ehri & McCormick, 1998). 6
One of the key features of Sound Partners is the close match between the phonics instruction and the reading practice in the decodable Bob books. By the middle of the program (lesson #50), students spend half of the 30-minute tutoring session on oral storybook reading. In the first third of the Sound Partners lessons, when scaffolding with decodable text may be most supportive, 85% of the unique words are decodable, and decodability decreases to 72% in the second third of the lessons. The decodable Bob books are also engaging and often humorous and have been enjoyed by tutors and students alike. Length of the Program Sound Partners includes over 100 lessons, more than most first-grade students and tutors will typically complete within one intervention year (about 20 weeks of instruction). This enables tutors to continue working with students who need more than one year of intervention. Recent findings on first-grade reading interventions provide two arguments for long-term individual support. Non-response to phonological skills interventions is a concern across intervention studies. Vellutino et al. (1996) found that 33% of students continued to score below the 30 th percentile after one semester of individual tutoring. O Connor (1992) reported that 10% of first graders who received one-to-one interventions failed to benefit significantly. Torgesen (Torgesen Wagner, & Rashotte, 1997; Torgesen Wagner, Rashotte, Rose, et al., 1999) reported that 10% to 39% of students did not respond to intervention (i.e., scored below the 30 th percentile on word attack or word identification measures at post-test). We found that 22% of students who received Sound Partners continued to score below the 25th percentile at post-test on spelling and word reading (Vadasy, Jenkins, & Pool, 2000). These students appear to require sustained intervention in early reading skills from either a tutor or reading specialist. Summary With Sound Partners, students receive explicit and systematic instruction in letter-sound relationships, decoding strategies, and carefully coordinated spelling instruction. Students have daily opportunities to practice accurate and fluent reading in decodable stories that feature the letters and sounds they are learning. Letter-sound relationships are introduced at a reasonable pace, with extensive practice opportunities and cumulative review of previously-taught relationships. Decoding instruction is explicit, with guided practice, scaffolding, and modeling. Tutors are provided with mastery tests to monitor student progress and to identify areas for additional review and practice. Progress reports are also included to help tutors communicate with classroom teachers and parents. Sound Partners has been tested in conjunction with varied classroom reading programs and complements the classroom teacher s regular reading instruction. Sound Partners training prepares paraprofessional tutors to adjust their pace of instruction and to provide additional review, scaffolding, and modeling, based on each student s needs. 7
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