A thread about Bill Cosby's remarks about African-Americans and their culture of romanticizing underachievement sparked a side issue about reading development.
I made the claim that research shows that those who read poorly in the first grade remain poor readers as they grow up. A couple of people disagreed with me, pointing to themselves as counterexamples. Aside from the fact that anecdotes do not constitute counter-evidence, I had not intended to claim 100%, but only the statistically signifcant amount the studies claimed.
I promised to find the studies and post a new thread, so this is it.
Bit of background: I do not claim expert knowledge on this subject or these studies. My wife is writing her dissertation for a PhD in Early Childhood Education, and I frequently help in proofreading, soundboarding, filing, etc. In that role, I have been exposed to quite a bit of her work but of course have not studied it to the same depth she has.
When I asked this weekend if I were representing the studies accurately, she agreed that I was, with the proviso that the studies actually only demonstrate continued poor readership through fourth grade and not through adulthood.
The seminal study is by Juel (1988).
Here is the abstract:
A supportive study is Bagdar, Brooks-Gunn, & Furstenberg (1993), but I cannot find a link.
Does anyone agree or disagree? And is anyone aware of further studies on this topic?
I made the claim that research shows that those who read poorly in the first grade remain poor readers as they grow up. A couple of people disagreed with me, pointing to themselves as counterexamples. Aside from the fact that anecdotes do not constitute counter-evidence, I had not intended to claim 100%, but only the statistically signifcant amount the studies claimed.
I promised to find the studies and post a new thread, so this is it.
Bit of background: I do not claim expert knowledge on this subject or these studies. My wife is writing her dissertation for a PhD in Early Childhood Education, and I frequently help in proofreading, soundboarding, filing, etc. In that role, I have been exposed to quite a bit of her work but of course have not studied it to the same depth she has.
When I asked this weekend if I were representing the studies accurately, she agreed that I was, with the proviso that the studies actually only demonstrate continued poor readership through fourth grade and not through adulthood.
The seminal study is by Juel (1988).
Here is the abstract:
Abstract of Juel (1988) said:Reading and writing development of 54 children from grade one through four was studied. Poor first-grade readers almost invariably were poor readers at completion of grade four. Poor readers tended to become poor writers. Early writing skill did not predict later ability as well as did early reading ability. (SLD)
A supportive study is Bagdar, Brooks-Gunn, & Furstenberg (1993), but I cannot find a link.
Does anyone agree or disagree? And is anyone aware of further studies on this topic?