Accel. Reader Program - good, bad & ugly

cajunmommy

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For those of you who have familiarity with the Accelerated Reader Program, would you mind giving your viewpoints on the pros & cons?

I'm thinking that anything that encourages reading can't be bad, but maybe I'm missing something. I'm trying to figure out if this is a program our parent group should continue to request. Then again, your comments could help me understand why our admin is not in favor of pursuing this.

What have your (or your kids' experiences) been?
 
You are talking about the computer program that schools have that allows students to test on books and earn points?

If so, I love AR and the kids do too. I can't think of many drawbacks. I would definitely continue requesting it.
 
It really depends on how your school does it. When our kids were in elementary school it was completely voluntary but kids could earn extra credit or got prizes for doing it. Each year at the end of the year the child with the most AR points got their name on a trophy and a gift card to the book store. Most of the kids in the school participated and our kids enjoyed it. Some teachers had some basic requirements that they wanted kids to read one easy, one at grade level and one difficult book through the year but the kids had complete choice in what those books were.
 
For those of you who have familiarity with the Accelerated Reader Program, would you mind giving your viewpoints on the pros & cons?

I'm thinking that anything that encourages reading can't be bad, but maybe I'm missing something. I'm trying to figure out if this is a program our parent group should continue to request. Then again, your comments could help me understand why our admin is not in favor of pursuing this.

What have your (or your kids' experiences) been?

I'm not a big fan. Maybe the school I worked at utilized it poorly, but to me it didn't seem to target the kids that really need encouragement in reading. If you were a super strong reader, then woohoo... prizes for you, but if you struggled with reading, it was hard to make your set goal. Most of the struggling readers lost interest in the goal prizes (and in turn the reading) pretty quickly, because they knew they wouldn't win anything. Also, it doesn't have any kind of corrective measures built in. If a child scores poorly on a quiz, there is nothing to help him score better next time. I think there are better uses of technology money. OUr school dropped the AR program finally.
 

We love it. Not mandatory until 4th grade, but even then the requirements are totally do-able at our school. My 9yo hates reading but she had no trouble with the required 1 AR test per month. We are at a private school with strict uniform so the kids earn points for out of uniform passes which are highly prized.
 
Love it but my DD9 is going to bankrupt me in Kindle book downloads...can't complain though she is just a reading machine. DS12 likes to read as well, but has lost interest in the reading for AR tests...just likes to read for fun.

Summer reading list is out and here's a shocker - both kids have already read all of the books on the list - now what? - they are supposed to do a book report on something they haven't already read and the AR tests show they already read them.
 
DD does AR her school and I love it. She enjoys reading once she starts but its usually the last thing she chooses to do unless encouraged. Its voluntary but DD always participates because she likes the prizes. Which are usually a day out of class to go do something fun. Last time they went swimming.

The way their program works is they have to meet certain goals for each quarter for points, average book level and their percentage correct. DD never has a problem being over the average book level and she always reaches her point goal. Occasionally we have to work on the percentage because she will pick a book that seems okay but then the test is too hard for her. I think they have to stay above 85%. But getting a low score on one or two tests can really bring that percentage down. All in all though i think its a good program.
 
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I'm not a big fan. Maybe the school I worked at utilized it poorly, but to me it didn't seem to target the kids that really need encouragement in reading. If you were a super strong reader, then woohoo... prizes for you, but if you struggled with reading, it was hard to make your set goal. Most of the struggling readers lost interest in the goal prizes (and in turn the reading) pretty quickly, because they knew they wouldn't win anything. Also, it doesn't have any kind of corrective measures built in. If a child scores poorly on a quiz, there is nothing to help him score better next time. I think there are better uses of technology money. OUr school dropped the AR program finally.

While the program can do that, I see it more as a way to reward strong readers and recognize that ability. Often those kids don't get recognized in other areas-sports, etc. That is not always the case but in our experience often that was the area where a lot of those kids excelled and it was nice they got some recognition for that.
 
I have mixed emotions when it comes to the AR program. I think it definitely helps in motivating kids to read books, particularly in the younger grades. The kids at our school are given a party or some kind of treat at the end of every 9 weeks if they meet their goal.

The problem that I have with the program is a situation we had this year with my oldest dd. She was in 4th grade, but her reading range was set between 6th grade and 9th grade levels. DD was really interested in a series of books that averaged around the 5th grade level and she loved reading them. However, her AIG teacher had a fit because she was reading books "below her level." Dh and I both agreed that we would not discourage dd from reading what interests her, particularly since it was reasonably close to her range. The situation became a bit of a struggle between us and the teacher who gave dd a really hard time about it at school.
 
While the program can do that, I see it more as a way to reward strong readers and recognize that ability. Often those kids don't get recognized in other areas-sports, etc. That is not always the case but in our experience often that was the area where a lot of those kids excelled and it was nice they got some recognition for that.

It's great to reward the strong readers, but there are cheaper ways to do that. AR is very expensive...too expensive to be used for that.
 
I have mixed emotions when it comes to the AR program. I think it definitely helps in motivating kids to read books, particularly in the younger grades. The kids at our school are given a party or some kind of treat at the end of every 9 weeks if they meet their goal.

The problem that I have with the program is a situation we had this year with my oldest dd. She was in 4th grade, but her reading range was set between 6th grade and 9th grade levels. DD was really interested in a series of books that averaged around the 5th grade level and she loved reading them. However, her AIG teacher had a fit because she was reading books "below her level." Dh and I both agreed that we would not discourage dd from reading what interests her, particularly since it was reasonably close to her range. The situation became a bit of a struggle between us and the teacher who gave dd a really hard time about it at school.

Her AIG teacher (whatever that is) is clueless. Kids need to read books all across their reading level to develop great reading skills. Reading easier books helps increase reading speed and comprehension. Any reading specialist will tell you that.
 
I'm not sure what makes it so expensive but I admit I don't know anything about the cost of it.


I still think its a great tool to encourage reading. Especially in kids, like DD, who enjoy it but don't always choose to read without some extra encouragement. It has helped DD to find a couple series of books that she enjoys that she might not have found otherwise.

Not all the kids in DD's class/grade opt to participate. Its totally voluntary. But DD is not going to miss out on the special activities they get to do for meeting the goals so she does it everytime.
 
It's terrible. Schools use it to dictate what books kids can or can't read for credit. It dictates the school library collection.

Does not foster love of reading for kids. Makes reading a chore.

Cannot say enough bad things about it.
 
I'm not a big fan. Maybe the school I worked at utilized it poorly, but to me it didn't seem to target the kids that really need encouragement in reading. If you were a super strong reader, then woohoo... prizes for you, but if you struggled with reading, it was hard to make your set goal. Most of the struggling readers lost interest in the goal prizes (and in turn the reading) pretty quickly, because they knew they wouldn't win anything. Also, it doesn't have any kind of corrective measures built in. If a child scores poorly on a quiz, there is nothing to help him score better next time. I think there are better uses of technology money. OUr school dropped the AR program finally.


I agree with Magic Mom. AR doesn't encourage struggling readers. I am the reading tutor for my school and all the kids I work with dislike AR. Also the kids in our school only read books that can be used for AR. If a book is of interest but it isn't on the AR list they won't read it. As for my own kids, oldest ds figured out in 3rd grade that if he takes the test for one of the Harry Potter books, he got enough points to make his goal and didn't read another book. Each new grading period he did the same thing. This went on until 6th grade. My other ds just took the tests on the same books every year so he could make his goal points. DD took alot of tests this year so she could have lunch with the teacher each quarter. She said it was always the same 5 or 6 girls that met the goal the teacher set for the quarter.
 
I have mixed feelings about the program.

Pros:
-Gets kids reading toward a goal. At our school, it's a graded class (grades 2 and up) and the final grade is made up of a mix of meeting their goal and being responsible in filling out the reading log and having their books, etc.
-The goals are set for each individual student. They will have a higher goal to reach if they are a stronger reader. Their level of books they can read is based on an assessment they take 2 times a year.
-It motivates most kids since they earn both a grade and prizes.
-The ongoing time input from the teachers does not appear to be huge; the computer program helps out with the workload since it grades the quizzes. Of course, whoever will have to label all the books with the AR levels at start-up will have a lot of work!

Cons:
-As a PP mentioned, the students can only read books "on their level". That does not take into account encouraging students to read books that interest them or they enjoy. (This is also somewhat of a pro - it keeps kids from reading too many books that are too easy for them and not "growing as a reader".)
-As a PP said, it dictates what the library buys...if AR doesn't have a quiz for it, even if it's a good book...it's probably not going to be in the school library. Also, kids aren't allowed to read books or magazines that are NOT AR books until they have met their goal. At that point, they can also read books that are outside of their range.
-Kids tend to choose fiction books vs nonfiction; the quizzes are often easier for F than NF. In other schools I've worked in that don't use AR, kids read a lot more NF books than I see at this school.
-(My biggest issue with it) The questions the quizzes ask are sometimes bizarre. None of them are deep, probing questions like would be asked in a book club discussion. They are all basic knowledge level questions that prove the student has read the book. And sometimes even if you've read the book, you may not remember who said a random quote or what foot someone was standing on.

I think some of things I see as cons could be dealt with depending on how you structure the reading program. It would require more work from the teacher though. You could mandate that they read books from x number of genres each term. For example, they must read 1 biography, 1 informational nonfiction, 1 graphic novel (story in "comic book form"), 1 fiction, 1 poetry, etc. before they can read a 2nd in that genre. It would get them reading more diverse texts.

Also, instead of just taking the quiz, there could be some kind of additional book response required for each book. Obviously, you'd have to set the AR goals lower since they'd be doing things in addition to just the quizzes, but you'd get deeper comprehension. Things like having a small group of kids read the same book and discuss it and keep notes, creating a map of the book, a family tree from the characters in the book, a graphic organizer of information, a book review (like they do in newspapers), a story map, a response essay, write a different ending, make a movie or skit, etc....so many good book response possibilities other than just "take an AR quiz!"
 
It's terrible. Schools use it to dictate what books kids can or can't read for credit. It dictates the school library collection.

Does not foster love of reading for kids. Makes reading a chore.

Cannot say enough bad things about it.

I have to disagree with you there. At our school we have dropped 90% of the mandated books that we had to read in Middle school. I like the fact that the kids can be tested on their own merit and on books that they enjoy not the ones the reading teacher told you to read.
I was never a reader in school because frankly other then The Outsiders I was never interested in the books we had to read from 5th to 8th grade. So I never opened the book, I would just wing it.

It may or may not foster the love of reading but to some kids they will never love to read, with or without a test. I don't really think a computer test can make you love reading, that is something fostered between the child and the adults in his or her life.
My DS9 hates to read, partly because of his ADD and because he had speech issues when he was younger. Reading was and still is a struggle for him. The AR test allowed his teachers to get a decent assessment for him and allowed him the freedom to read what he wanted. He read Flat Stanley well into 4th grade and while he knew he wouldn't get a million AR points for it, it allowed him to be comfortable reading.

for DS14 the test allowed him to read at his personal reading level. He has been consistently 2-3 years above grade level, but with the AR and the use of the internet we could find age appropriate books that would keep his interest. Without AR he would have been stuck reading what the state and the school deemed suitable for a 6th grader, even if he was bored to tears.

My only complaint about AR is the fact that new books take time to get a test for. DS14 typically is waiting for the next book in the series to come out and he usually has a lag between reading the book and having the test available. I wish the AR people could get an advanced copy of the book to have the test available for the release date of the book.
 
Reading this thread has made me appreciate my school even more. First of all, if books are not on the AR list, they can write a one page paper about the book to get points. Secondly, they can read whatever they want - does not have to be in their reading level. Third, the rewards are all individual, so it's not like a group of kids is getting left out of a party. The out of uniform pass requirements vary per grade. For my first graders it was 2 points, for my 4th grader it was 12 points. I really think it's more how the school chooses to implement the program that determines it's success, not the program itself.

ETA: My school has even written tests and submitted them to the AR company for books that they want to be included.
 
I really like AR when used as a supplemental tool. I like how my kids' school has implemented it. They have to set a goal for points and get 90% accuracy in the comprehension. They also have to read at their level.

My niece's school set goals for points, but they could read any level. She quickly figured out she could read a bunch of easier books faster than those at her correct level.

I watched my oldest take a test once. The questions are only at the knowledge/comprehension level. They do not dig deep. I've heard of one teacher who only uses AR as her primary reading curriculum. It would not be enough for this. I think it should be used to encourage the outside reading but teachers still need to be questioning and teaching reading.

A couple of years ago our school bought all tests. This made it so much better. Before, when they only had certain tests, I would get irritated that my child had to pick from certain books. Now, it seems like almost all the books have an AR test. It does take a couple of months for brand new books.
 
Same here Lemondog, our kids could read above or below reading level and our school doesn't use the AR test to dictate library selections. I'm sure AR books are in the library but we have Harry Potter, Ranger's Apprentice, Magic Tree House. Stuff the kids want to read not just stuff they have to read.

I was curious about a particular book DS10 read, Hugo Cabret. He read it over Christmas break in 3rd grade (it was a book that my grandmother gave him). It was a level 5.1 on the AR site, and was able to take the test when he returned from break.
 
Same here Lemondog, our kids could read above or below reading level and our school doesn't use the AR test to dictate library selections. I'm sure AR books are in the library but we have Harry Potter, Ranger's Apprentice, Magic Tree House. Stuff the kids want to read not just stuff they have to read.

I was curious about a particular book DS10 read, Hugo Cabret. He read it over Christmas break in 3rd grade (it was a book that my grandmother gave him). It was a level 5.1 on the AR site, and was able to take the test when he returned from break.

I did this with DD also. She read a book of her own over Christmas break so I looked it up and sure enough it was in the AR system and she took a test when she got back to school.

They have the Puppy Place books and Boxcar Children books in the library at DD's school and she really enjoys both of those series.
 













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