A $3.5 million grant to the 不良研究所 School of Education will bring reading instruction to 100 first-grade classrooms in Sacramento, Yolo and other counties in the region as well as in Houston, Texas, by next fall.
The grant, from the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Institute of Education Science, focuses on students who are struggling with early reading. Teachers will be taught specific skills to work with children who have difficulty reading 鈥 typically about one of every five students in a first-grade classroom, said Emily Solari, assistant professor of education at 不良研究所.
鈥淒ata suggests that students who have trouble reading in first grade will struggle their whole academic career,鈥 said Solari. 鈥淚t is very difficult, beyond second and third grade, to catch up.鈥
Solari has worked for many years at 不良研究所, and before that at the University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Children鈥檚 Learning Institute on developing teaching methods and academic interventions for children who experience reading difficulty. She also directs, through 不良研究所, a reading clinic for children with high-functioning autism spectrum disorder. That clinic operates in part from a $30,000 gift received last year from Sarah Cornett-Hagen, a private donor whose son had learning difficulties.
Solari and her colleagues have completed pilot projects in California and in Texas, funded by IES, where they鈥檝e found that in small samples, individual attention and specific teaching methods improved both basic reading skills and reading comprehension.
An important piece is to help students comprehend what they read, she said.
鈥淪ometimes we do a very good job teaching struggling readers to read single words and paragraphs, and they can read out loud to you, but they don鈥檛 capture the meaning of what they have read,鈥 she said. She added that most reading intervention programs concentrate on reading fluency, not on systematically teaching reading comprehension.
Specific urban and rural schools where the program will operate will be identified during the summer months. After a 20-week program in first grade, students will be assessed again in second grade to see how well they maintained their skills.
鈥淲e have preliminary data to show this approach works for struggling readers,鈥 Solari said. 鈥淲ith this larger grant, we will be able to make a larger impact, touching more teachers and students.鈥
Other researchers include Emilio Ferrer, professor of psychology at 不良研究所; and Carolyn Denton and Tricia Zucker, both professors of pediatrics, University of Texas Health Science Center, Children鈥檚 Learning Institute.
Media Resources
Karen Nikos-Rose, Research news (emphasis: arts, humanities and social sciences), 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu