This study describes an evaluation of a read aloud intervention to improve comprehension and vocabulary of first-grade students. Twelve teachers were randomly assigned to an intervention or comparison condition. The study lasted 19 weeks, and the intervention focused on the systematic use of narrative and expository texts and dialogic interactions between teachers and students delivered in whole-classroom formats. Read aloud intervention lessons included before-, during-, and after-reading components and explicit instruction targeted comprehension and vocabulary knowledge. Teachers in the comparison condition implemented the same amount of read aloud instruction, focusing on strategies they believed would help their students with comprehension and vocabulary. On some, but not all, outcome measures, intervention students at low risk and high risk for language difficulties outperformed comparable students in the comparison group. Implications are discussed.
-
-
Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
-
An Evaluation of an Explicit Read Aloud Intervention Taught in Whole-Classroom Formats In First Grade
Scott K. Baker and Lana Edwards Santoro,
University of Oregon
David J. Chard,
Southern Methodist University
Hank Fien,
University of Oregon
Yonghan Park, and
Gangneung-Wonju National University
Janet Otterstedt
University of Oregon
ARTICLE CITATION
Scott K. Baker, Lana Edwards Santoro, David J. Chard, Hank Fien, Yonghan Park, and Janet Otterstedt, "An Evaluation of an Explicit Read Aloud Intervention Taught in Whole-Classroom Formats In First Grade," The Elementary School Journal 113, no. 3 (March 2013): 331-358.
MOST READ
Of all published articles, the following were the most read within the past 12 months
-
-
Silverman et al.
-
Dewey
-
Van Steenbrugge et al.
-
Manny



