Culturally,
Linguistically and Ability Diverse Children, Youth and Families
Deaf Literacy
Disproportionality English
Language Development/ESL Reading Instruction
Social Skills and Discipline
Study Skills Additional
Topics
Related
Information
April,
2000
National
Reading Panel Reports Combination of Teaching Phonics, Word Sounds,
Giving Feedback on Oral Reading Most Effective Way to Teach Reading
In
the largest, most comprehensive evidenced-based review ever conducted
of research on how children learn reading, a Congressionally mandated
independent panel has concluded that the most effective way to teach
children to read is through instruction that includes a combination
of methods.
The
panel determined that effective reading instruction includes teaching
children to break apart and manipulate the sounds in words (phonemic
awareness), teaching them that these sounds are represented by letters
of the alphabet which can then be blended together to form words
(phonics), having them practice what they've learned by reading
aloud with guidance and feedback (guided oral reading), and applying
reading comprehension strategies to guide and improve reading comprehension.
For
children with learning disabilities and children who are low achievers,
systematic phonics instruction, combined with synthetic phonics
instruction produced the greatest gains. Synthetic phonics instruction
consists of teaching students to explicitly convert letters into
phonemes and then blend the phonemes to form words. Moreover, systematic
synthetic phonics instruction was significantly more effective in
improving the reading skills of children from low socioeconomic
levels. Across all grade levels, systematic synthetic phonics instruction
improved the ability of good readers to spell.
Read
the complete National Institutes of Health (NIH) press release at
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/apr2000/nichd-13.htm
Read
the full report - "Report of the National Reading Panel: Teaching
Children To Read" at http://www.nichd.nih.gov/publications/nrppubskey.cfm
Swanson,
H. Lee, with Haskyn, M. and Lee, C.(1999). Interventions for Students
with Learning Disabilities: A Meta-Analysis of Treatment Outcomes.
This publication, available from Guildford
Publications, Inc., is the "first comprehensive quantitative
analysis of intervention research in the learning disabilities field.
It synthesizes the results of 272 scientifically credible group and
single subject studies in an effort to identify what works best for
learning disabled children. The book examines pertinent finding on
all academic, cognitive, and behavioral domains. Intervention outcomes
are evaluated across instructional domains, sample characteristics,
intervention parameters, methodological procedures, and article characteristics."
Related
Organizations
Council
for Exceptional Children (CEC)
Division of Learning Disabilities (DLD)
1920 Association Drive
Reston, VA 22091-1589
Tel: (800) 328-0272
Tel: (703) 620-3660
http://www.cec.sped.org
Council
for Learning Disabilities (CLD)
P.O. Box 40303
Overland Park, KS 62204
Tel: (913) 492-8755
Learning
Disabilities Association of America (LDA)
4156 Library Road
Pittsburgh, PA 15234
Tel: (412) 341-1515
http://www.ldanatl.org/
National
Center for Learning Disabilities (NCLD)
381 Park Avenue South, Suite 1420
New York NY 10016
Tel: (212) 545-7510
http://www.ncld.org/
National
Information Center for Children & Youth with Disabilities (NICHCY)
P.O. Box 1492
Washington, DC 20013-1492
Voice/TTY: (800) 695-0285
Voice/TTY: (202) 884-8200
http://www.ncld.org/
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International
Dyslexia Association
Chester Building
8600 LaSalle Road, Suite 382
Baltimore, MD 21204
Tel: (410) 296-0232
http://www.interdys.org/
Division
for Learning Disabilities
http://edhd.bgsu.edu/DLD/
Related
Sites:
Southwest
Educational Development Laboratory
The Cognitive Foundations of Learning to Read: A Framework
This reading acquisition framework describes complex interrelationship
of factors influencing reading skill in a pictorial format. It explains
concepts such as Language Comprehension, Linguistic, Knowledge,
Background Knowledge, Decoding, Cipher Knowledge, Lexical Knowledge,
Letter Knowledge, Phenome Awareness, Knowledge of the Alphabetic
Principle, and Concepts About Print.
http://www.sedl.org/reading/framework/
Put
Reading First:
The Research Building Blocks for Teaching Children to Read
This is a booklet for teachers that was developed by the Center
for the Improvement of Early Reading Achievement (CIERA) and
was funded by the National
Institute
for Literacy (NIFL) out of the National Reading Panel findings.
http://www.nifl.gov/nifl/partnershipforreading/publications/PFRbooklet.html
Reading
Rockets
WETA, through a major grant from the Department
of Education, Office
of Special Education Programs started Reading Rockets, a multimedia
effort to
disseminate research-based information on how to help young, struggling
readers.
http://www.readingrockets.org/
LD
Online
WETA Washington, DC
http://www.ldonline.org
The
Learning Center
16944 Ventura Boulevard
Encino, CA 91316
Tel: (818) 783-6633
http://members.aol.com/GDeskinPhD/
Special
Kids
Exciting, new learning videotapes and educational materials for
children (even teens) with learning disabilities.
Tel: (800) KIDS-153
E-mail: info@specialkids1.com
http://www.specialkids1.com/
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The
Center for New Discoveries in Learning
P.O. Box 1019
Windsor, CA 95492
Tel: (707) 837-8180
Tel: (800) 469-8653
Fax: (707) 837-9190
http://www.howtolearn.com/
Child
Development Institute
Provides information on parenting, child development, child psychology,
learning disabilities, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder,
dyslexia as well as reading and study skills improvement.
http://www.cdipage.com/
Different
Roads to Learning
An on-line catalog specializing in learning materials and playthings
for children with developmental delays and challenges. http://www.difflearn.com/
Reading
for Understanding in the Middle Grades
http://www.JosseyBass.com/catalog/isbn/0-7879-5045-9/
A recent book from Jossey-Bass, "Reading for Understanding: A Guide
to Improving Reading in Middle and High School Classrooms,"grows
from the work of Ruth Schoenbach and her colleagues, who developed
the "Academic Literacy" program network -- aimed at helping poor,
urban youth develop the reading skills they need to succeed in academic
coursework. Read the preface and find out how to order "Reading
for Understanding" (published in partnership with WestEd).
Middle
School Reading Ideas
http://www2.evansville.edu/mgrnweb/articles.html
The Middle Grades Reading Network, based at the University of Evansville
(IN) and supported by the Lily Endowment, offers a selection of
articles that can support efforts to strengthen reading programs
in the middle grades. Many of these short pieces offer sound, straightforward
ideas; e.g. "Older Students Are Reading Role Models for Younger
Students in Middle Grades Schools," and "Middle Grades Reform: Pitfalls
of the De-emphasis of Reading," by Network director Jack W. Humphrey.
The Network's homepage can be accessed at: http://www2.evansville.edu/mgrnweb/
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