Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Education, Western University, London, ON N6G 1G7, Canada
Abstract
In 2022, the Ontario Human Rights Commission released the Right to Read Report that outlined 157 recommendations for literacy instruction in Ontario, Canada. For educators, these recommendations included using structured literacy in their classrooms. The present study investigated teachers’ perceptions of how difficult implementing these recommendations would be and what they saw as facilitators and barriers. Teachers reported that starting structured literacy practices would be easier than both stopping current practices (e.g., cueing, running records) and providing more intensive instruction or intervention to struggling students. They also noted that initial teacher training programs need to do more to prepare teacher candidates. They identified teacher training, classroom resources, funding, and teacher beliefs as the factors that can serve equally as facilitators and barriers to successful implementation. Recommendations are offered by teachers to ease a shift towards structured literacy practices.
Reference40 articles.
1. Phonological recoding and self-teaching: Sine qua non of reading acquisition;Share;Cognition,1995
2. Ending the reading wars: Reading acquisition from novice to expert;Castles;Psychol. Sci. Public Interest,2018
3. Seidenberg, M.S. (2017). Language at the Speed of Sight: How We Read, Why So Many Can’t, and What Can Be Done about It, Basic Books.
4. Preventative reading interventions teaching direct mapping of graphemes in texts and set-for-variability aid at-risk learners;Savage;Sci. Stud. Read.,2018
5. Friesen, D.C., Schmidt, K., Atwal, T., and Celebre, A. (2022). Predicting reading comprehension performance with strategy use: Comparing bilingual children to their monolingual peers and to bilingual adults. Front. Psychol., 13.