Excellence and Equity in Literacy Education
The Case of New Zealand
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About the authors:Literacy is arguably the most important goal of schooling as, to a large extent, it determines young children's educational and life chances and is fundamental in achieving social justice. New Zealand's literacy education programme has long been regarded as one of the world's most successful approaches to teaching literacy skills to young children. Excellence and Equity in Literacy Education questions this widely held assumption. In the late 1990s the New Zealand government developed a national literacy strategy aimed at reducing persistently large inequities in literacy achievement outcomes. The chapters in this edited volume present evidence indicating that the national literacy strategy has failed, examine the major factors responsible for the continuation of New Zealand's comparatively wide spread of scores in literacy achievement, and describe the most effective strategies for reducing the literacy achievement gap and achieving excellence and equity in New Zealand literacy education.
William Tunmer is Distinguished Professor of Educational Psychology, Institute of Education, Massey University, New Zealand. He has published over 150 journal articles, book chapters, and books on reading acquisition, reading difficulties, and reading intervention. In 1999 he was co-winner of the International Reading Association's Dina Feitelson Award for Excellence in Research.
James Chapman is Professor of Educational Psychology, Institute of Education, Massey University, New Zealand. He has extensive publications on learning difficulties and has served as President of the International Academy for Research in Learning Disabilities. In 1999 he was co-winner of the International Reading Association's Dina Feitelson Award for Excellence in Research.