Connecting Reading Fluency and Oral Language for Student Success

ASHA Leader ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 11-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shari Robertson
2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. S435-S435
Author(s):  
F.J. De Santiago Herrero ◽  
D.M. García-Mateos ◽  
I. Arconada Díez ◽  
C. Torres Delgado ◽  
A.M. Trigo Bensusan

IntroductionThe study of the oral and written language delayed at the school makes possible the early detection of scholar, behavioral and psychiatric disorders. These difficulties could affect to the personal and professional development.ObjectivesTo confirm the relationship between language oral and written delayed for the early detection of developmental disorders.MethodA sample of 350 subjects among 5 and 23 years of age is analyzed with oral and/or written language difficulties. It is studied diagnosis, gender, age, reason for treatment, grade and submitter.ResultsThe specific learning disabilities (SLD) request a 62.3% of the treatment among 7–10 years. The percentages of SLD are: reading comprehension difficulties (17.4%), dysorthography (13.4%), reading fluency and reading comprehension difficulties (12.9%), reading fluency (11.7%) and, dysorthography and reading fluency (6.9%). There exist percentage differences between repeaters (39.4%) and no repeaters (22.9%) students with DALE. The oral/written language provides the early detection of Intellectual disabilities (8.6% of the simple). The relation between the reason for treatment and diagnosis do not coincide: the consults was 3.7% for oral language delay, 2.6% for reading comprehension difficulties, 1.4% for dysorthography and 0.9% for reading fluency. The school demand more treatment (50.9%), next to medical centers (22.3%) and family initiative (15.7%).ConclusionsThe oral/written language delayed – especially the reading comprehension difficulties – are a good early detection for the developmental disorders (intellectual disabilities minor, SLD and TDAH at the primary stage). There is more percentage of boys than girls (2:1) with language delayed, except at Intellectual disabilities, because there is an identical percentage (4.3%).Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 1115-1129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria G. Tosto ◽  
Marianna E. Hayiou-Thomas ◽  
Nicole Harlaar ◽  
Elizabeth Prom-Wormley ◽  
Philip S. Dale ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 307-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
John M. Holahan ◽  
Emilio Ferrer ◽  
Bennett A. Shaywitz ◽  
Donald A. Rock ◽  
Irwin S. Kirsch ◽  
...  

We systematically assessed the relationships between growth of four components of verbal ability—Information, Similarities, Vocabulary, and Comprehension subtests of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale–Revised—and longitudinal growth from Grades 1 to 9 of the Woodcock–Johnson Psycho-Educational Battery Passage Comprehension subtest while controlling for Word Identification and Word Attack, using multilevel growth models on a sample of 414 children. Growth was assessed over all grades (1-9), and separately for early grades (1-5) and later grades (5-9). Over all grades, growth in Word Identification had a substantial standardized loading to Passage Comprehension, and all four verbal abilities had smaller, but significant standardized loadings to Passage Comprehension ( p < .05), with Information and Vocabulary having slightly higher loadings than Similarities and Comprehension. For early grades, results were similar to the overall results, with the exception of Vocabulary, which had a nonsignificant loading to Passage Comprehension. For later grades, Word Identification again had the largest, but substantially smaller standardized loading on Passage Comprehension and standardized loadings of all four verbal abilities were statistically significant with Vocabulary and Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children–Revised (WISC-R) Comprehension having appreciably higher loadings than in the previous analyses. Conversation- and interaction-based intervention and instruction in oral language in general, and vocabulary in particular throughout early childhood and continuing throughout the school years, combined with evidence-based instruction that systematically develops the skills of phonologic awareness, decoding, word reading, fluency, and comprehension in school, may provide a pathway to reducing the achievement gap in reading.


2020 ◽  
pp. 002221942096133
Author(s):  
Sylviane Valdois ◽  
Caroline Reilhac ◽  
Emilie Ginestet ◽  
Marie Line Bosse

A wide share of secondary school children does not reach the expected competence level in reading. These children could benefit from more efficient intervention responses, providing a better understanding of their cognitive weaknesses/deficits. Our aim was to explore the cognitive heterogeneity of a population of poor readers identified from a large sample of 948 sixth-grade children. We first assessed the contribution of phoneme awareness (PA), rapid automatized naming (RAN), and visual attention span (VAS) to reading performance in a subset of 281 children including poor and average readers/spellers. We show that all three skills are unique and significant predictors of reading fluency. We then restricted the analysis to participants with normal Raven’s score (IQ) and oral language skills to focus on 110 children with more specific reading difficulties. A unique VAS deficit was found in 18% of these poor readers while 20% and 15.5% showed a unique PA or RAN deficit. Children with multiple or no deficit were further identified. The overall findings provide evidence for a variety of cognitive profiles in poor readers. They suggest that, in addition to PA interventions, training programs targeting VAS might be useful for the nontrivial share of poor readers who exhibit a VAS deficit.


2016 ◽  
Vol 35 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 24-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dowon Choi ◽  
Ryan C. Hatcher ◽  
Susan Dulong-Langley ◽  
Xiaochen Liu ◽  
Melissa A. Bray ◽  
...  

The kinds of errors that children and adolescents make on phonological processing tasks were studied with a large sample between ages 4 and 19 ( N = 3,842) who were tested on the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement–Third Edition (KTEA-3). Principal component analysis identified two phonological processing factors: Basic Phonological Awareness and Advanced Phonological Processing. Canonical analysis and correlation analysis were conducted to determine how each factor related to reading, writing, and oral language across the wide age range. Results of canonical correlation analysis indicated that the advanced error factor was more responsible for reading, writing, and oral language skills than the basic error factor. However, in the correlation analysis, both the basic and advanced factors related about equally to different aspects of achievement—including reading fluency and rapid naming—and there were few age differences.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fábio Gonçalves ◽  
Alexandra Reis ◽  
Filomena Inácio ◽  
Inês Salomé Morais ◽  
Luís Faísca

Research on the predictors of reading comprehension has been largely focused on school-aged children and mainly in opaque orthographies, hindering the generalization of the results to adult populations and more transparent orthographies. In the present study, we aim to test two versions of the Simple View of Reading (SVR): the original model and an extended version, including reading fluency and vocabulary. Additional mediation models were analyzed to verify if other reading comprehension predictors (rapid automatized naming, phonological decoding, phonological awareness, morphological awareness, and working memory) have direct effects or if they are mediated through word reading and reading fluency. A sample of 67 typical adult Portuguese readers participated in this study. The SVR model accounted for 27% of the variance in reading comprehension, with oral language comprehension displaying a larger contribution than word reading. In the extended SVR model, reading fluency and vocabulary provided an additional and significant contribution of 7% to the explained variance. Moreover, vocabulary influenced reading comprehension directly and indirectly, via oral language comprehension. In the final mediation model, the total mediation hypothesis was rejected, and only morphological awareness showed a direct effect on reading comprehension. These results provide preliminary evidence that the SVR (with the possible addition of vocabulary) might be a reliable model to explain reading comprehension in adult typical readers in a semitransparent orthography. Furthermore, oral language comprehension and vocabulary were the best predictors in the study, suggesting that remediation programs addressing reading comprehension in adults should promote these abilities.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chin Yang Shapland ◽  
Ellen Verhoef ◽  
George Davey Smith ◽  
Simon E. Fisher ◽  
Brad Verhulst ◽  
...  

AbstractThere is genetic overlap between many measures of literacy, language and phonological working memory (PWM) though our knowledge of multivariate genetic architectures is incomplete. Here, we directly modeled genetic trait interrelationships in unrelated UK youth (8-13 years, N=6,453), as captured by genome-wide relationship matrices, using novel structural equation modeling techniques. We identified, besides shared genetic factors across different domains (explaining 91-97% genetic variance in literacy-related measures such as passage reading fluency, spelling, phonemic awareness, 44% in oral language and 53% in PWM), evidence for distinct cognitive abilities; trait-specific genetic influences ranged between 47% for PWM to 56% for oral language. Among reading fluency measures (non-word, word and passage reading), single-word reading was genetically most diverse. Multivariate genetic and residual covariance patterns showed concordant effect directionality, except for near-zero residual correlations between oral language and literacy-related abilities. These findings suggest differences in etiological mechanisms and trait modifiability even among genetically highly correlated skills.


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