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Why Early Identification Intervention. 82 % of the street youth in Toronto had undetected and unremediated learning disabilitiesAll the adolescent suicides in a 3 year period in Ontario had undetected and unremediated learning disabilities. Why Early Identification Intervention. 75%-95% of ind
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1. Early Identification and Intervention to Prevent Reading Difficulties
2. Why Early Identification + Intervention 82 % of the street youth in Toronto had undetected and unremediated learning disabilities
All the adolescent suicides in a 3 year period in Ontario had undetected and unremediated learning disabilities
3. Why Early Identification + Intervention 75%-95% of individuals in prison have significant reading difficulties
In Vancouver, 45 % of ESL students fail to complete high school.
Undiagnosed and unremediated reading problems result in emotional and social difficulties
6. Critical Issues Recognize and treat dyslexia early
Understand the language development of ESL students
Understand the literacy difficulties of ESL students
7. How can we prevent reading difficulties?
8. Prevention Early identification
Early intervention
Evidence based reading programs
9. Screening We have the techniques to screen children who are at risk for learning disabilities at age 5
Screening should be universal
Easy to administer
Brief
10. 3 Tier Model 1. Classroom instruction
Early screening
2. Resource withdrawal
3. Intensive help
11. Characteristic of the 3 Tier Model
Excellent, evidence based classroom instruction
Frequent monitoring of performance
Help as soon as it is needed
Intensive assessment only as a last resort
12. Aims of the Study Identify children at risk for literacy difficulties
Provide an appropriate intervention
Assess the effectiveness of the intervention
13. Longitudinal Study Screening at age 5 when children enter school
Tested every year on reading, spelling, arithmetic, language and memory skills
Results at grade 6 age 12
14. Longitudinal Sample All the children in the North Vancouver School District
30 schools
Varying SES levels
20% English Language Learners (ELL)
Inclusion
15. Arabic
Armenian
Bulgarian
Cantonese
Croatian
Czech
Dutch
Farsi
Japanese
Korean
Kurdish
Mandarin
Norwegian
Polish
Punjabi
Romanian
18. Screening Effective
Brief 15-20 minutes
Done by teachers
Provide useful information
19. Kindergarten Screening
20. Letter Identification c r m k b w o
s y t a u d q
x l g e z n j
p h v i f
21. Sentence Repetition Sentences are spoken orally to the child and the child is required to repeat them exactly.
Examples.
Drink milk.
I like ice cream.
The boy and girl are walking to school.
The girl who is very tall is playing basketball.
22. Reading Test
25. Phonological Awareness Ability to break speech down into smaller units
? words
? syllables
? phonemes
30.
Jane ____her sister went up the hill.
Dad ____ Bobby a letter yesterday.
31. childs name
mom
dad
cat
I
no
32. Firm Foundations
Rhyme detection
Initial sounds
Segmentation
Blending
Sound discrimination
33. Firm Foundations Activities and games designed to develop
Phonological awareness
Letter sound relationships
Vocabulary
Syntactic skills
34. Circle Skills -Teaching the whole class
Centre Skills Practicing in small groups
Assessment - Working with individual students
35. Literacy Activities Listening to stories
Acting out stories
Singing songs
Letter of the week
Letter cookies
36. Other Important Abilities Vocabulary understanding and producing the meanings of words
Syntax understanding the basic grammar of the language
Differences between Chinese and English
Verb tenses
Plurals
Articles
37. Reading 44 Training reading comprehension strategies
Vocabulary
Syntax
38. Word Identification cat
see
book
should
finger
glutton
emphasis
intrigue
usurp
idiosyncrasy
39. Word Identification
40. Woodcock Word Attack dee
pog
ched
gouch
cigbet
bafmotbem
monglustamer
41. Word Attack
42. Word Reading Fluency
43. Psuedoword Reading Fluency
44. Phoneme/Syllable Deletion
45. Spelling
46. Pseudoword Spelling
47. Oral Cloze
48. Morphological - Words They need to diversionary
diversity
diversion
diversify
49. Morphological - Pseudowords The car is too rendalize
rendal
rendment
rendify
50. Morphological Task- Words
51. Morphological Task- Pseudowords
52. Stanford Reading Comprehension
53. Experimental Reading Comprehension
54. SES & Reading
55. SES & Spelling
56. KindergartenSYNTACTIC AWARENESS
57. Grade 6Syntactic Awareness
58. Conclusions It is possible to identify children at risk for reading disabilities in kindergarten.
It is possible to provide a classroom based intervention to bring most of these children to at least average levels of reading.
Children learning English as a second language can perform at L1 levels and bilingualism may be an advantage.
59. Conclusions Most ELL dyslexic children have better reading, spelling and phonological skills than their monolingual peers.
Many ELL normal readers have better English reading, phonological, and spelling skills in their second language than children who have English as a first language.
60. Caveats The development of language and literacy skills in ESL students requires good teaching
First language maintenance is important wherever possible
61. Internet Resources http://www.nvsd44.bc.ca
Click on Firm Foundations
Click on Reading 44
62. Improving Reading Comprehension Skills
64. Reading 44 Teaches Reading Comprehension Skills
Daily Dozen Reading Strategies
65. ESL Students 1. visual aids
- pictures, graphs, objects
2. reinforce vocabulary through games
e.g. hiding an object, hot-cold
3. dual language picture dictionary
4. dual language books
5. group work provides models
66. ESL Students 1. Discuss the strategies frequently
2. Daily reading in small groups
- Activates prior knowledge
- Introduces new vocabulary
- Models the reading process
3. Make connections & associations
4. Repetition
- Text with repetitive vocabulary
- Pattern books
67. ESL Students 5. reading at home in first language of parent
- read to the child
- cloze procedure
6. pre=reading knowledge building
7. select materials to build confidence
- 90-95% word recognition
68. How To Teach Strategies identify strategy
discuss reasons
demonstrate thinking aloud
provide opportunities for practice
reinforce it in small groups
observe how well the student uses it
69. 1. ACCESS BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE
BRAINSTORMING
a) introduce concept and ask the children to generate ideas
b) teacher records all ideas
c) use generated word list on board
70. BUILDING FROM CUES a) teacher shows objects from the story and students discuss what the story may be about
b) for each object: where / when character / event
c) as each object is presented connect it to the plot
71. Vocabulary building a) Select words such as anthropology and psychology
b) Separate the words into parts
c) The students guess what the parts mean
d) The students think of other words with the same parts e.g., biology
72. 3. FIGURE OUT UNKNOWN WORDS W_ w _ ll g _ to the f _ _ m th _ s morn_ _ _.
a) ask students about how they guessed
b) as the teacher is writing, ask students to make predictions
73. Figure Out Unknown Words a) meaning
1) does it make sense?
2) have you heard a word like that before?
b) syntax
1) does it sound right?
2) can you say it that way?
c) visual
1) does it look right?
2) what do you see about that word?
d) self-correction
1) were you right?
2) what else could you try?
74. 4. Self-monitor And Self Correct 5 Finger Rule
keep track of the words that they do not know on their fingers
if there are 5 words in the first 100, get a new book
75. 5 W Questions To ask yourself while and after reading
who?
when?
what?
where?
why?
76. 5. MAKE MENTAL PICTURES Guided Imagery
? Does it make sense
Help! Ask for help
? Read on
? Reread
77. 6. CONNECT WHAT YOU READ WITH WHAT YOU KNOW KNOW / WONDER / LEARN
a) Present topic
1) KNOW
What do I know?
2) WONDER
What would I like to know?
b) Read selection
3) LEARN
What have I learned?
78. 7) Determine the most important ideas and events and the relationship between them.
Extract information from text, charts, graphs, maps and illustrations.
Identify and interpret literary elements in different genres
79. 10) Summarize What Has Been Read. 11) Make Inferences and Draw Conclusions.12) Reflect and Respond.
80. Early Identification and Intervention to Prevent Reading Difficulties
81. Word ReadingPortuguese L1
82. Word Reading Italian L1
83. Word Reading Arabic L1
84. Word AttackPortuguese L1
85. Word AttackItalian L1
86. Word AttackArabic L1
87. SpellingPortuguese L1
88. SpellingItalian L1
89. SpellingArabic L1
90. Final Conclusion
Bilingualism facilitates a childs literacy development.