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Early Identification and Intervention to Prevent Reading Difficulties. Linda Siegel University of British Columbia Vancouver, CANADA linda.siegel@ubc.ca. Why Early Identification + Intervention. 82 % of the street youth in Toronto had undetected and unremediated learning disabilities
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Early Identification and Intervention to Prevent Reading Difficulties Linda Siegel University of British Columbia Vancouver, CANADA linda.siegel@ubc.ca
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
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
Critical Issues • Recognize and treat dyslexia early • Understand the language development of ESL students • Understand the literacy difficulties of ESL students
Prevention • Early identification • Early intervention • Evidence based reading programs
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
3 Tier Model • 1. Classroom instruction • Early screening • 2. Resource withdrawal • 3. Intensive help
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
Aims of the Study • Identify children at risk for literacy difficulties • Provide an appropriate intervention • Assess the effectiveness of the intervention
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
Longitudinal Sample • All the children in the North Vancouver School District • 30 schools • Varying SES levels • 20% English Language Learners(ELL) • Inclusion
Arabic Armenian Bulgarian Cantonese Croatian Czech Dutch Farsi Japanese Korean Kurdish Mandarin Norwegian Polish Punjabi Romanian LANGUAGES IN THE STUDY • German • Greek • Hindi • Hungarian • Indonesian • Italian • Finnish • Russian • Serbian • Slovak • Spanish • Swedish • Tagalog • Tamil • Turkish
Kindergarten KINDERGARTEN L1 English ELL GRADE 5
Grade 6 KINDERGARTEN L1 English ELL Dyslexic Dyslexic Normal Normal GRADE 5
Screening • Effective • Brief – 15-20 minutes • Done by teachers • Provide useful information
Kindergarten Screening • Letter identification • Memory • Phonological processing • Syntax • Spelling
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
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.
the and sit when book
anacampersote mithridatism qualtagh ucalegon groak
Phonological Awareness • Ability to break speech down into smaller units words syllables phonemes
Oral cloze • Jane ____her sister went up the hill. • Dad ____ Bobby a letter yesterday.
SIMPLE SPELLING • child’s name • mom • dad • cat • I • no
Firm Foundations • Rhyme detection • Initial sounds • Segmentation • Blending • Sound discrimination
Firm Foundations • Activities and games designed to develop • Phonological awareness • Letter sound relationships • Vocabulary • Syntactic skills
Circle Skills -Teaching the whole class • Centre Skills – Practicing in small groups • Assessment - Working with individual students
Literacy Activities Listening to stories Acting out stories Singing songs Letter of the week Letter cookies
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
Reading 44 • Training reading comprehension strategies • Vocabulary • Syntax
Word Identification cat see book should finger glutton emphasis intrigue usurp idiosyncrasy
Woodcock Word Attack dee pog ched gouch cigbet bafmotbem monglustamer
Morphological - Words • They need to diversionary diversity diversion diversify
Morphological - Pseudowords • The car is too rendalize rendal rendment rendify