Ronald Reigner, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Language and Literacy & Director of the Developmental and Diagnostic Clinic
Phone: 678-839-6086 | Fax: 678-839-6099
Email: rreigner@westga.edu
Office: Education Annex 248
Biography
Dr. Ron Reigner is an Associate Professor of Reading Education in the College of Education and Director of the Developmental and Diagnostic Reading Clinic. He teaches courses in reading instruction, children's literature, and reading diagnosis and assessment at the undergraduate and graduate level. His research focuses on affective dimensions of literacy acquisition, children’s access to literature, and fluency/prosody and its effect on comprehension. Recent publications have focused on free book programs for children under five and the effect of trauma on reading. Dr. Reigner serves on the West Georgia Regional Library Board, the Carroll County Library Board, and on the boards of the Friends of the Neva Lomason Memorial Library and the Carroll County Ferst Foundation for Childhood Literacy.
Education/Degrees
- B.A., Religion/Sociology, Emory University, 1973
- M.Ed., Instructional Leadership in Reading, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1986
- PhD, Curriculum and Instruction in Reading, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1995
Courses Taught
- READ-3251 (Children [ View Syllabus ]
- READ-4251 (Assess/Correction Read Educ) [ View Syllabus ]
- READ-7264 (Clinical Practice in Reading) [ View Syllabus ]
Selected Publications
- Duplechain, R., Fenqjen, L., Ogletree, T., Reigner, R., & Packard, A. (2012). Children of Violence: Characterizing Patterns of Achievement for Caring, but Busy, Educators. GATEWays to Teacher Education: Journal of the Georgia Association of Teacher Educati [ View Publication ]
- Reigner, R. S. (2009). Free book programs from birth to five: The effect on preschool reading readiness. College Reading Association Yearbook, 30, 267-276. [ View Publication ]
- Duplechain, R., Reigner, R., & Packard, A. (2008). Striking differences: The impact of moderate and high trauma on reading achievement. Reading Psychology: An International Journal, 29(2), 117-136. [ View Publication ]
- Holbein, M. D., & Reigner, R. S. (2007). Collaboration, reflection, and research in teaching reading: A teacher education perspective. Journal of Reading Education, 32(3), 40-42 [ View Publication ]
