Chapter Ii
Chapter Ii
Research reviews
effective
practices
in
summer literacy
available funds for summer programs, and gathers information about how such
programs operate in district and city contexts, including facilitators and
challenges.
The clear challenge to extending the school year is its cost. In addition, in
cities across the country, districts that have tried to extend the school year (or
modify the calendar) have met resistance from parents, employers of teenagers,
and family recreation businesses. And data suggest that more time was cut
away from the instructional calendar in the 20102011 school year as fiscal
pressures forced school districts to weigh options to furlough teachers or
shorten the instructional calendar. For instance, 16 of the 30 largest school
districts in California reduced the number of school days to bal- ance their
budgets, and 12 districts cut instructional time by the maximum of fve days
(Benefield, 2010; Freedberg, 2010).
Summer programs, the focus of this monograph, are less costly than
extending the school year because they are typically offered only to a subset
of students. Thus,research demonstrates that there are clear differences in the
summer learning rates of low-income and higher-income students. It noted that
comparing the school year to summer break provides an opportunity to
isolate the effects of non- school influences on a young persons intellectual
development. Children from lower-income families lost, on average, more
learning specifically in reading comprehension and word recognition than
children from higher-income families.
These findings are consistent with research showing that families and factors
out- side of school influence reading achievement. Benson and Borman (2010)
also found that low-income students entered school performing roughly one
standard deviation below their higher-income peers. Low-income parents
read with, teach, and talk to their children less frequently, each of which
contributes to childrens literacy skills and school readiness.
Research also suggests that summer learning loss is cumulative. Given that
low-income students are more likely to forget what they have learned,
particularly in reading, than their higher-income
knowledge and skills in certain reading areas during the summer months),
repeated episodes of loss result in low-income students falling further and
further behind their more affluent peers.
Research indicates that summer vacation may have detrimental learning
effects for many students. On average, all students lose skills, particularly in
mathematics. How- ever, summer learning loss disproportionately affects lowincome students, particu- larly in reading. While their higher-income peers,
on average, post gains in reading, low-income students show losses at the end
of the summer. Most disturbing is that it appears that summer learning loss is
cumulative and that, over time, these periods of differential learning rates
between low-income and higher-income students contribute substantially to
the achievement gap. It may be that efforts to close the achievement gap
during the school year alone will be unsuccessful.
Given the established connection between academic learning time and
achieve- ment and the findings regarding summer learning losswhich is
particularly acute for low-income studentsit
Chantel
Zwiefelhofers
research
paper,
Using
Progress
to
help
However, there
address the
is another
to
Advocates for
modifcations to the
traditional school
calendar will
loss,
also help
but
it will
school
state
and
one
support provided
by the
researcher two days a week. Research has indicated that smaller class sizes
are needed to better provide support to students. Another downfall of the
summer school program evaluated was that the instruction was not
individualized
students who struggled across a variety of academic areas, reason why the
program covered a variety of subjects. However, some students may have
spent excessive time working on academic skills that were adequately
developed, while spending very little time in the areas of need.
have been more effective to
group students
It may
Research has indicated that most of these low performing students were
not able to learn the material the frst time around during the regular
school year; therefore,
different and more engaging for these students. The lack of instruction in
the areas of need appeared to result in greater frustration for students,
resulting in many to act out and refuse to do the work required of them
during the summer program.
Research on the
inconsistent.
There
programs is
have concluded
that
their peers,
peers,
and
the
of summer school
to develop studies
the influence of