|
includes/content/subnav.asp NOINDEX
|
Professional Development for Reading Recovery Trainers
“. . . we are able to break the bonds of the ordinary and the
taken-for-granted,
to move into spaces never known before. And that is what some of us,
considering
our craft, want for those we teach: the opportunity and capacity to
reach beyond,
to move towards what is not yet.”
— Maxine Greene
Reading Recovery trainers are faculty members within an
established university training center (UTC) or Regional Canadian
Institute who are responsible for initial and ongoing professional
development for teacher leaders, supporting a network of affiliated
Reading Recovery teacher training sites, expanding and strengthening
sites within the network, and ensuring the integrity of Reading
Recovery within the region. More than 20
Reading
Recovery UTCs currently provide the organizing structure for
states or regions of the United States, and 3 Canadian institutes
provide regional structures for that country.
Initial year of professional development
Becoming a Reading Recovery university trainer requires a
year-long residency program (at the post-doctoral level in the
United States). The initial year of professional development for
trainers is offered at four international centers: The Ohio State
University, Texas Woman’s University, the University of Auckland,
and the University of London. For more detailed information about
becoming a Reading Recovery trainer and about professional
development requirements for trainers see the
Standards and Guidelines for the United States and for
Canada.
During the year of study, candidates learn to
- teach Reading Recovery children.
- support the development of Reading Recovery teachers across
an academic year.
- bring diverse areas of theory and practice into working
relationships and educate other professionals to do this.
- work with teacher leaders across their initial year of
professional development and in subsequent years to ensure
cycles of change.
- establish and maintain high-quality Reading Recovery teacher
training sites.
- coordinate Reading Recovery in their network of sites,
advising administrators about sustaining the quality of
implementation.
- advise others about the range of research related to Reading
Recovery.
- monitor student outcomes to analyze implementation issues.
- conduct and report research and program evaluation.
- manage a university training center.
- communicate about and advocate for Reading Recovery.
Continuing professional development
University trainers meet for at least two extended sessions
annually and work collaboratively within the
North American Trainers Group (NATG). Committee structures
within NATG create opportunities for ongoing inquiry and study:
teaching and professional development, implementation, and research.
Trainers communicate on a continual basis about current theoretical,
research, and pedagogical perspectives and conduct research to seek
answers to questions about the many complex aspects of the
intervention.
North American trainers are also active members of the International
Reading Recovery Trainers Organization (IRRTO). The international
group is committed to improving the efficiency and effectiveness of
Reading Recovery and to supporting change and growth in Reading
Recovery through international collaboration, research, and resource
development. Sharing and learning from international colleagues
further enhances the ongoing professional
development of Reading Recovery trainers.
Reference
Greene, M. (1986). How do we think about our craft? In A.
Lieberman (Ed.), Rethinking school improvement: Research craft,
and concept (p. 23). New York: Teachers College Press.
|