How Santa Rosa uses data to boost reading


  • July 24, 2015
  • /   Shannon Nickinson
  • /   education

Education never ends.

As Reggie Dogan's story highlighted, third grade is a critical time in a child's education. The switch from learning to read to reading to learn is a key education milestone moment. That's why both Escambia and Santa Rosa school districts focus on it.

There are lots of things that play into Santa Rosa School District’s consistent success in reading scores on state standardized tests.

One of them is a partnership the district has had since 2008 with the University of West Florida’s Community Outreach Research Learning Center.

Last year I spoke with Carla Thompson, who has been conducting research in every elementary school in Santa Rosa County on which strategies are most effective — in third grade and at every elementary grade level.

Here are some highlights from the column I wrote about Thompson and her research:

Since 2008, Title I money has funded research by Carla Thompson and a group of observers who have watched nearly every elementary school teacher in the district at work.

The grant is for $53,449 a year.

Since the project began, Thompson’s work has become a feedback loop that helps teachers focus on continual improvement.

All classroom teacher at all 17 elementary schools, as well as specialists, special education teachers and paraprofessionals get the training, which highlights the importance of small group instruction in helping improve a child’s reading skill.

The observers conduct 1,500 observations a year, looking for 85 activities that may occur in reading instruction.

What are they looking for?

— Do they work in small groups?

— Are they doing a word ladder exercise, or a picture walk

— Do students work independently?

— Is the teacher leading the discussion? Are the students asking questions?

Thompson takes the observational data and at the end of the year, she gets the reading test data and she matches the two up.

“With that data, we can say which activities are significant contributors to achievement and which ones are not,” Thompson said.

Thompson shares those results with principals to use in staff development, or sometimes with parents groups.

They started in 2008 with four reading models. Now there are up to 64 teaching models that can be used in a classroom.

“The basic areas we look at match the FCAT: word study, fluency, comprehension and small group,” Thompson says.

What has all that focus meant?

— Kindergarten shows the most growth of any year.

“The growth in kindergarten is probably the greatest every year that we do the study, and they have very strong readers in Santa Rosa,” Thompson says.

— “So much effort has been put on the struggling reader is now the gap is almost completely gone. It’s (narrowed) every year since this program started in 2008. And that’s the best, most important finding.”

—  ESE referrals have decreased significantly, Thompson says.

Thompson says the study reinforces the importance of the concept of early intervention and early parent and teacher involvement.

It is a secret, Thompson believes, that is key to Santa Rosa’s success in posting — year after year — some of the best reading scores in the state of Florida.

“They are focused on early reading intervention every year,” she said.

“It is something that you are focused on and not just one of the six courses the child goes to,” she said. “Reading should be the major focus, and all of the effort in concentrated professional development of the teachers.”

Your items have been added to the shopping cart. The shopping cart modal has opened and here you can review items in your cart before going to checkout