Parent, teacher and researcher assessment in a study of precocious readers.

Authors

  • Valerie Margrain Ministry of Education, Special Education

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54322/kairaranga.v7i2.59

Keywords:

assessment, early childhood education, reading comprehension, teacher attitudes, teaching strategies, precocious readers, gifted, parental attitudes

Abstract

This article reports some of the findings of a study involving 11 New Zealand4-year-old precocious readers (Margrain, 2005). The children, aged between 4:01 and 4:101 had reading ages three to nine years above their chronological age. Assessment of precocious reading abilities is discussed, including how assessment findings are influenced by the beliefs of the assessor, and choices of assessment tools. The study found that there were differences between the practices and beliefs of the researcher and parents compared to early childhood and new entrant teachers. This article provides recommendations for practice, relating to
assessment practices and beliefs. These recommendations are pertinent to support working with precocious readers, but also more widely to other gifted learners.

Author Biography

  • Valerie Margrain, Ministry of Education, Special Education

    Valerie Margrain joined the Ministry of Education, Special
    Education national office in April 2006, to work on the
    special education exemplar project and Kairaranga.
    Her teaching experiences include primary, early childhood,
    Reading Recovery, ORRS, itinerant special education, tertiary
    and teacher education. Valerie graduated with her PhD
    I in May 2006, and lives with her busy family in a bushclad
    suburb of Upper Hutt.

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Published

01-07-2006

Issue

Section

Vol 7 Iss 2

How to Cite

Parent, teacher and researcher assessment in a study of precocious readers. (2006). Kairaranga, 7(2), 5-10. https://doi.org/10.54322/kairaranga.v7i2.59