Publication | Closed Access
Teachers' Knowledge of Literacy Concepts, Classroom Practices, and Student Reading Growth
294
Citations
38
References
2009
Year
EducationLiteracy DevelopmentClassroom PracticesTeacher KnowledgeTeacher EducationChild LiteracyReading ComprehensionLanguage AcquisitionReadingPrimary EducationLanguage StudiesLiteracy PracticeClassroom InstructionLiteracy LearningWord-reading GainsInstructionStudent Reading GrowthExplicit InstructionLiteracyTeacher PreparationLanguage ComprehensionLiteracy Concepts
We examined the relations of teacher knowledge (n = 42 first-grade teachers), explicit decoding instruction provided, and students' (n = 437) word-reading gains. Results revealed an interaction between teacher knowledge and observed decoding instruction: For students of more knowledgeable teachers, more time in explicit instruction predicted stronger word-reading gains. For students of less knowledgeable teachers, more time in explicit instruction was associated with weaker skill gains. Findings highlight the importance of teachers' specialized body of knowledge about reading as it informs effective instruction.
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