A randomized control trial of shared evaluation pedagogy: The near-term and long-term impact of dialogically organized reading instruction

Maren Aukerman*, Paolo C. Martin, John Gargani, Richard D. Mccallum

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

This randomized control trial evaluated the impact of dialogically organized reading instruction provided twice per week over six months in small-group settings to fifth grade students, primarily English learn-ers, assessed as needing additional support in comprehension development. Our dialogically organized instruction treatment, which we call Shared Evaluation Pedagogy (SHEP), was premised on: a) instigating dialogue about text, b) probing student thinking, and c) eschewing teacher evaluation. The 22 students in the SHEP treatment group demonstrated statistically significantly greater gains on near-term, re-searcher-administered measures of comprehension and decoding than did the 41 students in the con-trol group. Treatment students also outperformed control students on two measures on the California Achievement Test 6 administered one year later-spelling (statistically significant) and reading (large enough to be practically significant, but not statistically significant). We close by arguing there are strong pedagogical reasons for shifting the prevailing reading comprehension intervention paradigm toward dialogically organized forms of instruction that invite students to think and reason with one another about texts.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-26
Number of pages26
JournalL1 Educational Studies in Language and Literature
Volume16
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2016
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Dialogic instruction
  • English language learners
  • Reading comprehension
  • Reading intervention

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