| Following findings
of the 2000 and 2003 PISA Studies, the intervention study
Promoting Reading- and Writing Competencies examines the effectiveness of measures
schools take regarding children’s and adolescents’ reading accomplishments.
The study is based on a comprehensive reading competence model, which is not
aligned solely to functionality.
Two different methods of instruction were used in 61 school classes (3rd / 4th
and 7th / 8th school years, approximately 1100 learners): an open approach to
reading and writing promotion, which supports interest-led individual reading,
as opposed to a narrowly stipulated systematically guided training programme.
Learning improvements are measured with an ensemble of instruments. Questionnaires
survey attitudes and literal behaviour in leisure time; different tests (stumbleword
test, ELFE and a specially developed Test for the Evaluation of Emphatic Reading
Achievement – Test zur Ermittlung empathischer Leseleistung (TELL)) measure
literal accomplishments. This permits the presentation of differentiated findings
on the effectiveness of each of the different promotion methods relating to various
samples and to different aspects of reading competencies. It also permits assertions
regarding the effects of the two instruction methods.
At time t1, after the first
intervention, a strong increase was observed in reading activity and in particular
in leisure time reading namely within interest-led reading in the open
approach, as compared to traditional instruction. Conversely,
basic competencies developed better in traditional instruction.
Moreover, differential effects were observed between children
and adolescents.
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