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Journal ArticleDOI

Literacy and reading performance in the United States, from 1880 to the present

TL;DR: The authors reviewed literacy and reading achievement trends over the past century and place current debates in a historical perspective, and suggested that students' reading performance at a given age remained stable until the 1970s and much of it can be explained by the changing demographics of test-takers.
Abstract: THE AUTHORS review literacy and reading achievement trends over the past century and place current debates in a historical perspective. Although then-and-now studies are methodologically weak, they suggest that students' reading performance at a given age remained stable until the 1970s. The test score decline that then occurred was not as great as many educators think, and much of it can be explained by the changing demographics of test-takers. The decline pales when compared to the tremendous increase in the population's educational attainment over the past 40 years. However, the strategy of ever-increasing schooling to meet ever-increasing literacy demands may have run its course. High school dropout rates are increasing, and educational attainment has leveled off. Researchers have identified substantial mismatches between workers' skills and job demands, and between job and school literacy skills. In spite of their flaws, functional literacy tests suggest that 20 percent of the adult population, or 30 million people, have serious difficulties with common reading tasks. Upgrading literacy skills now requires new initiatives by coalitions of educators, community groups, employers, and government agencies.
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a curriculum analysis of several commercially published first grade basal reading programs is presented, which reveals significant discrepancies between the instructional strategies supported by the literature and the strategies endorsed by many first grade reading programs; cautions are included.
Abstract: This article bridges the gap between research and practice in beginning reading instruction by applying research-based evaluation criteria in a systematic analysis of recently published curriculum materials. Through a review of research on beginning reading instruction, the authors derived two instructional features characteristic of effective reading programs: explicit phonics instruction and a strong relationship between that phonics instruction and the words of the text selections in student reading materials. This article describes a curriculum analysis of several commercially published first-grade basal reading programs, which reveals significant discrepancies between the instructional strategies supported by the literature and the strategies endorsed by many basal reading programs; cautions are included. The authors conclude with recommendations for educators involved in evaluating, selecting, and modifying beginning reading curriculum materials.

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study demonstrates recombinative generalization of within-syllable units in prereading children in kindergarten, a promising step in the development of a computerized instructional technology for reading.
Abstract: This study demonstrates recombinative generalization of within-syllable units in prereading children. Three kindergarten children learned to select printed consonant-vowel-consonant words upon hearing the corresponding spoken words. The words were taught in sets; there were six sets, presented consecutively. Within sets, the four words that were taught had overlapping letters, for example, sat, mat, sop, and sug. Tests for recombinative generalization determined whether the children selected novel words with the same components as the trained words (e.g., mop and mug). Two children demonstrated recombinative generalization after one training set, and the 3rd demonstrated it after two training sets. In contrast, 2 other children, who received tests but no training, showed low accuracy across six sets. The 3 experimental children then demonstrated highly accurate printed-word-to-picture matching, and named the majority of the printed words. These findings are a promising step in the development of a computerized instructional technology for reading.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article argued that failure to learn to read has been reconceptualized as a problem of disability rather than socioeconomic disadvantage, and that these broader policy decisions have combined to shape a particular configuration of services for low-achieving readers at the school level.
Abstract: THE AUTHOR argues that, over the past two decades, failure to learn to read has been reconceptualized as a problem of disability rather than socioeconomic disadvantage. The high rate at which low-achieving readers are referred to special education classes and the concomitant decline in numbers of eligible students served in compensatory reading programs evidence a shift in how reading problems are perceived at the school level. This changing definition of failure to learn to read is also reflected in a decrease in the number of professional papers on the disadvantaged, and an increase in papers on the topic of disability. As a result of the interaction between the interests of the professional media, the federal government's concern for ensuring equity, and judicial and legislative requirements, disadvantaged students are merely eligible for compensatory education, whereas the learning-disabled are entitled to special education. Funding formulas often provide school boards with fiscal incentives to choose one type of service over another. It is argued that these broader policy decisions have combined to shape a particular configuration of services for low-achieving readers at the school level. Thus, the prevailing definitions of reading failure are embedded in policies that have emerged from a larger social and political context, a context that reading researchers need to be more aware of if low-achieving children are to benefit more fully from advances in professional knowledge.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 1998-Poetics
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated trends in leisure reading of the Dutch population between 1955 and 1995, using data from seven national representative time budget surveys, and found that the time spent on reading has diminished by about half.

65 citations

DOI
11 Jan 2013
TL;DR: A recent search of articles about television yielded 20,747 citations in the Educational Resources and Information Center (ERIC) database while a similar search in the PsycINFO database produced 6,662 citations as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: This chapter summarizes a body of literature about instructional technology that is unique not only in its depth but also in its breadth and importance. A recent search of articles about television yielded 20,747 citations in the Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) database while a similar search in the PsycINFO database produced 6,662 citations. It is fitting, therefore, that there be a chapter in this handbook which reviews how instructional technology has used research on television as well as how the field has contributed to this body of research.

55 citations

References
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Book
01 Jul 1983
TL;DR: In this article, the piedmont: textile mills and times of change, and the teaching of how to talk in Trackton and Roadville, are discussed, as well as the teachers as learners and the townspeople.
Abstract: Photographs, maps, figures, tables, texts Acknowledgments Prologue Note on transcriptions Part I. Ethnographer Learning: 1. The piedmont: textile mills and times of change 2. 'Gettin' on' in two communities 3. Learning how to talk in Trackton 4. Teaching how to talk in Roadville 5. Oral traditions 6. Literate traditions 7. The townspeople Part II. Ethnographer Doing: 8. Teachers as learners 9. Learners as ethnographers Epilogue Epilogue - 1996 Notes Bibliography Index.

4,564 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 1985-Language
TL;DR: In this article, the piedmont: textile mills and times of change, and the teaching of how to talk in Trackton and Roadville, are discussed, as well as the teachers as learners and the townspeople.
Abstract: Photographs, maps, figures, tables, texts Acknowledgments Prologue Note on transcriptions Part I. Ethnographer Learning: 1. The piedmont: textile mills and times of change 2. 'Gettin' on' in two communities 3. Learning how to talk in Trackton 4. Teaching how to talk in Roadville 5. Oral traditions 6. Literate traditions 7. The townspeople Part II. Ethnographer Doing: 8. Teachers as learners 9. Learners as ethnographers Epilogue Epilogue - 1996 Notes Bibliography Index.

4,208 citations

Book
01 Jan 1981
TL;DR: The Mismeasure of man was immediately hailed as a masterwork, the ringing answer to those who would classify people, rank them according to their supposed genetic gifts and limits, and yet the idea of innate limits-of biology as destiny-dies hard, as witness the attention devoted to The Bell Curve, whose arguments are here so effectively anticipated and thoroughly undermined by Stephen Jay Gould.
Abstract: When published in 1981, The Mismeasure of Man was immediately hailed as a masterwork, the ringing answer to those who would classify people, rank them according to their supposed genetic gifts and limits. And yet the idea of innate limits-of biology as destiny-dies hard, as witness the attention devoted to The Bell Curve, whose arguments are here so effectively anticipated and thoroughly undermined by Stephen Jay Gould. In this edition Dr. Gould has written a substantial new introduction telling how and why he wrote the book and tracing the subsequent history of the controversy on innateness right through The Bell Curve. Further, he has added five essays on questions of The Bell Curve in particular and on race, racism, and biological determinism in general. These additions strengthen the book's claim to be, as Leo J. Kamin of Princeton University has said, "a major contribution toward deflating pseudo-biological 'explanations' of our present social woes."

3,879 citations

Book
01 Jan 1976

2,825 citations

Book
16 Nov 1972
TL;DR: Most Americans say they believe in equality. But when pressed to explain what they mean by this, their definitions are usually full of contradictions as mentioned in this paper. But most Americans also believe that some people are more competent than others, and that this will always be so, no matter how much we reform society.
Abstract: Most Americans say they believe in equality. But when pressed to explain what they mean by this, their definitions are usually full of contradictions. Many will say, like the Founding Fathers, that “all men are created equal.” Many will also say that all men are equal “before God,” and that they are, or at least ought to be, equal in the eyes of the law. But most Americans also believe that some people are more competent than others, and that this will always be so, no matter how much we reform society. Many also believe that competence should be rewarded by success, while incompetence should be punished by failure. They have no commitment to ensuring that everyone’s job is equally desirable, that everyone exercises the same amount of political power, or that everyone receives the same income.

2,315 citations