The Reading to Learn (R2L) Program starts in Australia in the late 1990s, with the purpose of addressing one of the central problems for education at the time (and why not mention at all times): unequal participation in learning activities in school during reading and writing practices, caused by various factors, among them, family origin and social class. Rose and Martin (2012) argue that educational inequality persisted because the dominant approach did not explicitly teach the skills needed for literacy.
Blogger Comments:
This is incorrect. The Reading to Learn (R2L) Program did not start in the late 1990s. In the late 1990s, David Rose's 'Reading To Learn' was still known as Brian Gray's 'Accelerated Literacy'.
After completing his PhD thesis on an indigenous language in Sydney in 1998, David Rose was employed by Brian Gray to work on his 'Accelerated Literacy' program in Adelaide. It was only after David Rose finished working under Brian Gray, around 2001-2, that David Rose took credit for Brian Gray's ideas by renaming 'Accelerated Literacy' his 'Reading to Learn'.