The International Reading Association
Home |  Contact Us | Help | Site Map

Abstract of

Accountability for Reading and Readers: What the Numbers Don't Tell

 

full text - HTML   full text - PDF

 

The authors share what they learned when they assessed second graders' acts of reading. The children were in three different reading programs: Two were commercially produced and emphasized systematic, explicit phonics instruction (Reading Mastery, Open Court); the other was a literature-based program using an adaptation of guided reading. The authors address what it means to be accountable to children involved in the complex act of reading and argue that by such measures of accountability we learn much about readers that simple numbers from tests cannot tell.

Abstract from Wilson, P., Martens, P., & Arya, P. (2005, April). Accountability for Reading and Readers: What the Numbers Don't Tell. The Reading Teacher, 58(7), 622–631. doi: 10.1598/RT.58.7.3

 

arrowMore About RT

arrowArchives

arrowSelected Articles

arrowSubscription/Access Information

design image design image



menu arrowJournals

The Reading Teacher

Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy

Reading Research Quarterly

Lectura y Vida

Reading Online

menu arrowBooks, Brochures, Videos

menu arrowReading Today

menu arrowRights and Permissions

menu arrowFor Authors

menu arrowFor Reviewers

menu arrowFor Advertisers