This Brief provides the theoretical foundation of the Camp Sharigan
program, while discussing its practical applications and summarizing
research studies. It addresses the question often raised in literature
and in school-based settings: What is the most effective way to teach
children to read? Chapters explore a group-centered approach to
correcting reading failure and offers research-based field studies to
demonstrate the success of the Camp Sharigan method. The group-centered
theory combines learning and counseling into the same program to
strengthen education and mental health. In addition, creative-art
therapy techniques are also explained and demonstrated.
Featured topics in this Brief include:
- Vowel clustering and its use in improving phonemic awareness.
- Why group-centered prevention is better for teaching.
- The importance of cohesion and cohesive-learning in group-centered
prevention.
- The use of individualized rotation to increase motivation and
instruction in children who struggle to read.
Teaching At-Risk Students to Read is as an essential resource for
psychology and educational professionals as well as researchers and
graduate students who are interested in improving teaching methods with
at-risk students, reducing school dropout rates, increasing intrinsic
motivation for struggling readers, changing to an effective method for
teaching children to read, improving student engagement, and
strengthening self-regulated learning.