fluency intervention
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2021 ◽  
pp. 001440292110275
Author(s):  
Shawn M. Datchuk ◽  
Derek B. Rodgers ◽  
Kyle Wagner ◽  
Bridget O. Hier ◽  
Christopher T. Moore

We estimated effects of writing interventions on the level and trend of writing fluency—rate of total words written over time—by students with and without disabilities. Using mixed-effects regression and an information-theoretic ranking of competing models, we synthesized results of 42 single-case experimental design studies with a total of 205 students. A variety of acquisition and fluency interventions were used across studies, such as self-regulated strategy development and timed practice with performance feedback. We found acquisition and fluency interventions produced an increase in level and a gradual increase in trend of total words written per minute. Students receiving fluency intervention tended to have higher levels of performance across experimental phases (i.e., baseline, intervention, and postintervention), but students receiving acquisition had steeper upward trends. In addition, we found higher levels of total words written per minute on writing tasks with brief time limits (i.e., ≤10 min) and in the writing of older students.


2021 ◽  
pp. 002221942199124
Author(s):  
Paul K. Steinle ◽  
Elizabeth Stevens ◽  
Sharon Vaughn

This systematic review synthesizes fluency intervention research for struggling readers in Grades 6 through 12 from January 2006 to October 2019. The search yielded 17 studies examining reading fluency and comprehension outcomes. Most studies examined repeated reading (RR) interventions to improve reading fluency for struggling readers at these grade levels, resulting in improved fluency but few positive effects on reading comprehension outcomes, similar to trends observed in prior systematic reviews. Reading connected text with an equivalent word count to word counts of RR sessions did not result in increased reading fluency, a finding aligned with a prior synthesis. Few studies used a fluent reader as a model prior to RRs, despite previous support for modeling within fluency interventions.


Author(s):  
James D. Stocker ◽  
Elizabeth M. Hughes ◽  
Andrew Wiesner ◽  
Shirley Woika ◽  
Michele Parker ◽  
...  

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