Benefits of Structured After-School Literacy Tutoring by University Students for Struggling Elementary Readers

This study examines the effectiveness of minimally trained tutors providing a highly structured tutoring intervention for struggling readers. We screened students in Grades K-6 for participation in an after-school tutoring program. We randomly assigned those students not meeting the benchmark on a r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Grantee Submission 2018-03, Vol.34 (2), p.117-131
Hauptverfasser: Lindo, Endia J., Weiser, Beverly, Cheatham, Jennifer P., Allor, Jill H.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study examines the effectiveness of minimally trained tutors providing a highly structured tutoring intervention for struggling readers. We screened students in Grades K-6 for participation in an after-school tutoring program. We randomly assigned those students not meeting the benchmark on a reading screening measure to either a tutoring group or a control group. Students in the tutoring group met twice per week across one school year to receive tutoring from non-education major college students participating in a service-learning course. The goal of this study was to determine whether tutors without prior teaching experience or instruction could improve student reading outcomes with minimal training, a structured reading curriculum, and access to ongoing coaching. Tutored students displayed significantly more growth than control students in letter-word identification, decoding, and passage comprehension, with robust effect sizes of 0.99, 1.02, and 0.78, respectively. We discuss the implications and limitations of these findings.
ISSN:1057-3569
1521-0693
DOI:10.1080/10573569.2017.1357156