Training parents as effective literacy tutors: Increasing the procedural integrity of tutoring
Abstract
We trained parents to tutor their child through implementing a repeated reading procedure designed to increase oral reading fluency. Our study was conducted over a two-week winter break at the homes of the parent and child. Baseline data for each child were collected using curriculumbased measurement (CBM) to determine an instructional reading level prior to the tutoring session. Following baseline, we trained parents as tutors to implement all aspects of the reading procedure including administering, scoring, and recording data. All sessions were audio recorded to assist with the data collection, scoring, treatment integrity, and inter observer agreement (IOA). According to results from our study, parent tutors were able to accurately score the reading probes and implement the repeated reading procedure with a high level of treatment fidelity following the training. In addition, parents were satisfied with the tutoring experience and the reading fluency for all children increased at the completion of the tutoring sessions. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.
Publication Title
Mentoring and Tutoring: Partnership in Learning
Recommended Citation
Casey, L., & Williamson, R. (2011). Training parents as effective literacy tutors: Increasing the procedural integrity of tutoring. Mentoring and Tutoring: Partnership in Learning, 19 (3), 257-276. https://doi.org/10.1080/13611267.2011.597118