Abstract

This study addressed the concept of reading instructional level. First, we reviewed the history of the concept, including some recent criticisms of its validity (Schwanenflugel & Knapp, 2017; Shanahan, 2014). Next, we examined, from an instructional-level perspective, the oral reading performance of 248 third graders. We divided the sample into quartiles (based on third-grade reading rate) and tested for between-quartile differences in the students' reading of second-, third-, and fourth-grade passages. A major finding was that the lowest quartile differed significantly from the other quartiles in oral reading accuracy and rate, showing, at best, a second-grade print-processing level at the end of third grade. Finally, we considered how our findings raise old—and still controversial—questions about the best way to provide instruction to low-achieving readers in the elementary grades.

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