High School One
From 1999-2000, a study to examine the effectiveness of the Seeing Stars® program
was conducted at a high school in California. Thirty-eight students with decoding
issues were randomly assigned to experimental (Lindamood-Bell) and comparison
(normal language arts curriculum) conditions. All students were pre-tested
on a battery of nationally normed assessments, received instruction for approximately
12 weeks (Lindamood-Bell® students averaged 52 hours of instruction), and
were re-tested on the same battery. Average pre-test performance on every test
administered was statistically similar between the two groups, thus allowing
for a comparison of average gains. The following illustrates comparative gains
between the two groups.

The Lindamood-Bell® students outperformed (p < .05) the comparison students on the average decoding composite across several tests—word recognition, spelling, word attack, reading rate, and reading accuracy.
High School Two
The following results were from twenty-eight decoding focus students at a high
school in Alaska for the 2003-2004 school year. Their average age was 15 years-old
and they received an average of 70 hours of instruction. All of the following
results from pre- to post-test are statistically significant (p < .05).

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