1 / 30

Robert McCabe Vice President and Chief Education Officer Lexia Learning Systems, Inc. rmccabe@lexialearning

Robert McCabe Vice President and Chief Education Officer Lexia Learning Systems, Inc. rmccabe@lexialearning.com. Lexia Company History. Founded in 1984 Federal Grants from National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)

amish
Download Presentation

Robert McCabe Vice President and Chief Education Officer Lexia Learning Systems, Inc. rmccabe@lexialearning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Robert McCabeVice President and Chief Education Officer Lexia Learning Systems, Inc.rmccabe@lexialearning.com

  2. Lexia Company History • Founded in 1984 • Federal Grants from National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) • Computerize the Orton-Gillingham pedagogy of reading instruction • Over 20 years building reading software

  3. Beneficial Characteristics of CAI in Published Studies • Well suited for individualized supplementary instruction. • Activities can be intrinsically motivating. • Computers provide explicit training. • Consistent fidelity of treatment • Computer assisted instruction has improved accurate word reading. • Speeds up skill acquisition • Extends teacher resources

  4. Specific Attributes of Lexia CAI • Excellent practice to reinforce specific skills • Sequenced, systematic and structured (OG) • Independent, differentiated and appropriate • Provides for the needs of at-risk and advanced students. • Compatible with either a centers or lab model • Balances strengths and weaknesses of the child • Balances strengths and weaknesses of the curriculum.

  5. Lexia Research Resources • Journal of Research in Reading, Volume 29, Issue 2, 2006. Title I study. • Reading Psychology, Kindergarten study. • Implementation Study, manuscript in preparation. • “Lexia Best Practices” white paper • “Leveraging Technology...” – paper presented at conference. • Boston Public Schools Evaluation, 2004.

  6. Characteristics of Success - Reading Instruction in K-3 • Early Intervention • Differentiated Instruction • Small Group Instruction • Ability Grouping • Decoding and Encoding • Modeling and Scaffolding

  7. Research Requirements • Treatment and control groups • Pre- and post-testing using standardized measures • Equated groups on pretest scores • Sufficient implementation over school year

  8. Close to 50% non-Caucasian/Bilingual • Over 50% qualify for free or reduced lunch • District wide participation • Kindergarten-third grade sample • 45 classes • 812 total students

  9. Assessment Tool Gates-MacGinitie Reading Test • Kindergarten (Level PR) – phonological awareness, letter-sound correspondences, listening comprehension • First grade (Level BR) – letter-sound correspondences, basic story words • Second grade (Level 2) – word decoding, reading vocabulary, reading comprehension • Third grade (Level 3) – reading vocabulary, reading comprehension

  10. Kindergarten Study • 3 treatment, 3 control classes • Lexia Early Reading • Matched classes – same teacher, classroom, and curriculum

  11. All children Low performers Kindergarten Results

  12. New Publication Update! The Kindergarten Manuscript has been accepted for publication in Reading Psychology: An International Quarterly

  13. First Grade Study • 5 treatment, 5 control classes • 83 students in treatment group, 84 students in control group • Subanalysis – Title I (15 students in treatment group, 15 students in control group)

  14. Title I Students Lexia Students First Grade Results

  15. Grade 1Average Comprehension Gain Score (By School Building) Gates MacGinitie Standard Change Score

  16. Lexia’s UK Published Research Title 1 findings appear in the Journal of Research in Reading v29 (2), May 2006 “The efficacy of computer-based supplementary phonics programs for advancing reading skills in at-risk elementary students”

  17. Second Grade Study • 7 treatment, 4 control classes • Students in two groups matched on pretest scores – 41 students in each group

  18. Second Grade Results Decoding Subtest

  19. Third Grade Study • 13 treatment, 5 control classes • Lower performers only • 46 students in treatment group, 65 students in control group

  20. Third Grade Results Reading Comprehension Subtest

  21. Lexia Middle School Study • 3 remedial reading classes: 47 subjects, two treatment classes, one control class (31 SPED students) • Identical instruction plus Lexia Strategies for Older Students in treatment classes (50 sessions avg.) • Woodcock Johnson III assessment tool • Pre-test determined two Lexia groups: Extremely Low Group (pre-test <80) and Low Average Group (pre-test >80)

  22. Word-Attack Subtest - WJIII Comparison of Treatment Students with Very-Low Pretest Scores and Control Students

  23. Passage Comprehension Subtest Comparison of Treatment Students with Low-Average Pretest Scores and Control Students

  24. Data Driven Results • Lexia contributed to reading gains in grades K - 3 and middle school • Gains most evident for low performers • Results are consistent with published data • Teachers support the use of the programs

  25. Best Practices and Implementation Tips**You have the details in your handout

  26. Frequency and Duration of Use • 4 to 5 times a week • Kindergarten: Everybody benefits • Grades 1-3: Student performance drives your implementation • Grades 4 and above: Intensive remediation, English language learners

  27. “High Benefit Students” • Low pre-test scores • High user sessions • High gain scores

  28. Scheduling Use • Time on task • Lexia and the language arts block • Targeted implementation • What are you using your technology for?

  29. Class Versus Lab Use • Class use characteristics • Lab use characteristics

  30. Research and Resources Questions?

More Related