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Citation/Abstract

The Effects of a Summer Reading Program on Students' Oral Reading Fluency


2014 2014

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Abstract (summary)

Students' reading skills are closely linked to academic success; however, several students fall behind, especially during the summer months when no academic expectations are present. The summer months are also a time when the achievement gap increases between students from lower income and middle to upper income households. Researchers examined the effect a three-week summer reading program had on elementary students' oral reading fluency scores. There was a statistically significant increase in students' scores from the first day of the program to the last day, measured through administration of curriculum-based measurements. Researchers also investigated participants' perceptions of reading and found a majority of summer reading program participants had a prior enjoyment of reading. Findings suggest that supplemental reading programs in the summer do increase literacy skills, thus decreasing the decline and equalizing opportunities for students from all backgrounds to succeed.

Indexing (details)


Subject
Elementary education;
Educational psychology;
Literacy;
Reading instruction
Classification
0524: Elementary education
0525: Educational psychology
0535: Literacy
0535: Reading instruction
Identifier / keyword
Education, Summer reading program, Oral reading, Fluency
Title
The Effects of a Summer Reading Program on Students' Oral Reading Fluency
Author
Dredge, Stephanie
Number of pages
31
Publication year
2014
Degree date
2014
School code
1060
Source
DAI-A 74/07(E), Jan 2014
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
Country of publication
United States
ISBN
9781267978660
Advisor
Kelly-Vance, Lisa
Committee member
Strasser, Rosemary, McKevitt, Brian, Pasco, Rebecca
University/institution
University of Nebraska at Omaha
Department
Psychology
University location
United States -- Nebraska
Degree
Ed.S.
Source type
Dissertations & Theses
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
3556128
ProQuest document ID
1322974488
Copyright
Copyright ProQuest, UMI Dissertations Publishing 2014
Document URL
http://search.proquest.com/docview/1322974488