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A Literacy Tutoring Experience for Prospective Special Educators and Struggling Second GradersSouthern Connecticut State University, SPEARSWERLL1{at}southernct.edu This study examined the learning of teacher candidates taking a language arts course in a special-educator preparation program and that of the second graders they tutored in a supervised field component of the course. Teacher candidates knowledge of literacy instruction was assessed using five knowledge tasks; children were assessed on several measures of basic reading and spelling skills as well as on their knowledge of phonics concepts such as syllable types. Teacher candidates generally had inaccurate perceptions of their knowledge at pretest, but their knowledge improved significantly on all tasks after course instruction. Tutored children improved significantly from pre- to posttest on all assessments. The study suggests that carefully designed literacy coursework with field experiences can benefit both prospective special educators and struggling readers.
Key Words: reading special education teacher education teacher knowledge teacher perceptions
This version was published on September
1, 2009 Journal of Learning Disabilities, Vol. 42, No. 5,
431-443 (2009) This article has been cited by other articles:
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