Title: ASSESSING READING CHALLENGES: THE ROLE OF METALINGUISTIC SKILLS
1ASSESSING READING CHALLENGES THE ROLE OF
METALINGUISTIC SKILLS
- Lorain Szabo Wankoff, PhD, CCC-SLP
- LLSW_at_aol.com
- Queens College of the
- City University of New York
2ASSESSING READING CHALLENGES THE ROLE OF
METALINGUISTIC SKILLS
- What to assess?
- How to begin to instruct?
3Research in reading acquisition
- Language prerequisites M
- Emergent literacy skills E
- Developmental stages T
- Core reading skills A
- (e.g. Decoding, Comprehension, Fluency) L
- I S N K
- G I U L
- I L
- S S
- T
- I
- C
4Reading skill requires the mastery of at least
three core elements
- Decoding the printed word
- Comprehension of written language
- Fluency
- CURRENT RESEARCH SHOWS THAT THE CHILD WHO IS
SUCCESSFUL AT LEARNING TO READ WILL HAVE
DEVELOPED CERTAIN SPECIFIC ANALYTIC ABILITIES.
5PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS READING ABILITYMOST
HEAVILY RESEARCHED
- PREDICTOR OF READING SUCCESS
- EFFICACY OF TRAINING TO FACILITATE DECODING FOR
STUDENTS WITH DYSLEXIA, SPEECH IMPAIRMENTS, ELL
6PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS
- Can the child perform
- Phoneme Deletion -What word is left is we remove
the /k/ from car? - Word to Word Matching - Do pen and pipe begin
with the same sound? - Blending What word would we have if we put
these sounds together/s/ /a/ /t/ ? - Sound Isolation What is the first sound in
rose? - Phoneme Segmentation What sounds do you hear in
the word hot? - Phoneme Counting How many sounds do you hear in
the word cake? - Deleted Phoneme- What sound do you hear in meat
that is missing from eat? - Odd Word Out- What word starts with a different
sound? Bag, nine,beach,bike - Sound to Sound Matching- Is there a /k/ in
bike?
7RESEARCH INDICATES THAT
- METALEXICAL
- AND
- METASYNTACTIC SKILLS
- ARE ALSO PREDICTORS OF READING SUCCESS!
8WHILE DEFICITS IN PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS CAN
EXPLAIN DECODING CHALLENGES, THE PREDICTORS OF
READING ABILITY CHANGE WITH TIME
- Roth, Speece and Cooper (2002)
- While PA predicted word and pseudo-word reading
in 1st and 2nd grade, - Semantic abilities and print awareness were most
predictive of 1st and 2nd grade reading
comprehension. - The two most important semantic skills were the
ability to provide oral definitions and word
retrieval.
9While classroom teachers sometimes require
students to practice formulating definitions,
- The importance of assessing this ability in
students with reading challenges, and training
this ability if it is weak is typically not an
area of focus. - Research has shown that decontextualized language
skillls including the ability to provide word
definitions are correlated strongly with reading
comprehension.
10That the ability to provide formal definitions is
a function of metalinguistic skill and schooling
was demonstrated in a study by
- Benelli, et al. (2006) For 280 children (ages
5-11) as well as 40 adults with differing levels
of formal education, performance on a series of
metalinguistic tasks could predict the formal
quality of their definitions.
11Current research that examines the effectiveness
of teaching certain metalinguistic strategies
appears to have wide application to the classroom
teacher and SLP
- Nash and Snowling (2006) examined metasemantic
awareness-how vocabulary acquisition in 7 and 8
year olds impacts reading comprehension. Two
different methods of teaching new words were
utilized. - Definitions were presented orally OR
- Target words were embedded in a written paragraph
that was coupled with a semantic map that
highlighted the relationship between te target
word and other related words. - While both experimental groups improved in
measures taken immediately after the training, 3
months later the second group went on to show
significantly better expressive vocabulary
knowledge and comprehension of text containing
those words. - This research highlights the value of teaching
metalexical awareness with methods that emphasize
concrete examples embedded within language
contexts coupled with visual support.
12Larsen and Nipold (2007) examined the acquisition
of definitions and its relationship to reading.
- A dynamic assessment procedure was used that
required 50 typically developing 6th graders to
explain the meaning of 15 low frequency
morphologically complex words. Various amounts of
scaffolding were provided by the examiner.
Student performance on the task revealed a great
degree of variability that was positively
correlated with their literacy levels. This
implies that instruction must be dynamic and
informed by the literacy level of the student.
13Metalexical Awareness
- Can the child
- Analyze a sentence into lexical units or words?
- Categorize a word according to its superordinate?
- Give examples of subordinate category members?
- Provide the definition for a word including
superordinate information and specific
differentiating features? - Provide a synonym for a word?
- Provide an antonym for a word?
- Provide multiple meanings for homonyms or
lexically ambiguous words? - Identify the grammatical category for a word?
14Although metasyntactic awareness has been studied
less frequently than other metalinguistic skills,
- a number of studies have demonstrated the
connection between metasyntactic judgments and
the development of reading. In particular these
studies have shown that grammatical judgments are
a predictor of reading ability ability (Scholl
Ryan, 1980 Bohannon, Warren-Leubecker, Hepler,
1984) Pratt, Tunmer Bowey, 1984 Fowler, 1988)
Bentin, Deutsch, Liberman, 1990 Dermont
Gombert, 1996 Nation Snowling, 1998, 2000) and
reading comprehension in particular (Cairns,
Schlisselberg, Waltzman McDaniel, 2006).
15Metasyntactic Awareness
- Can the child
- Unscramble a jumbled sentence?
- Fill-in missing words in sentences or phrases?
- Determine if two sentences have the same or
different meanings? - Determine if a sentence is grammatical or not?
- Correct grammatical errors?
- Recognize or produce a paraphrase of a sentence?
- Recognize or detect a lexically or structurally
ambiguous sentence i.e. determine if the sentence
in question can have more than interpretation.
16Cairns, Waltzman, Schlisselberg (2004) found
ambiguity detection to be a significant predictor
of reading achievement for preschoolers one year
later.
- Ambiguity detection skill was related to 1st
grade reading achievement and to second and third
grade reading achievement. - Detection of lexical ambiguities (e.g. The
children saw the bat lying near the fence.)
develops in first grade, correlates highly with
reading readiness measures, and is a strong
predictor of second grade reading ability
indicating that it is a precursor of reading
skill. - Structural ambiguity detection(e.g.The girl
tickled the baby with the teddy bear.) emerged
in second grade and was a predictor of third
grade reading ability.
17Beyond simply predicting reading ability, there
have been successful training studies in
ambiguity detection designed to facilitate
reading.
- Zipke (2006) recently demonstrated that training
riddle comprehension and homonym and sentential
ambiguity detection resulted in increases in
reading comprehension scores. - Pilot data reported by Wankoff Cairns (in
press) described a youngster from a Hispanic home
with reading comprehension challenges but good
reading decoding whose reading comprehension
scores improved markedly after ambiguity
detection training.
18Reading skill requires the mastery of at least
three core elements
- Decoding the printed word
- Comprehension of written language
- Fluency
- CURRENT RESEARCH SHOWS THAT THE CHILD WHO IS
SUCCESSFUL AT LEARNING TO READ WILL HAVE
DEVELOPED CERTAIN SPECIFIC ANALYTIC ABILITIES.
19METALINGUISTIC SKILLS
- THIS REFLECTIVE CAPACITY IS NECESSARY NOT ONLY
FOR THE MASTERY OF PHONOLOGICAL INFORMATION BUT
FOR SEMANTIC AND SYNTACTIC COMPETENCE AS WELL.
20After a careful look at research in the areas of
language, emergent literacy, and metalinguistic
development, these reearched-based principles
must guide our assessments and intervention with
reading-impaired youngsters
- 1. Assessment procedures for reading must be
designed to identify where on the developmental
continuum the reader is functioning for word and
passage decoding, reading fluency, and passage
comprehension. - 2. Our assessment procedures for reading and
writing must include an assessment of receptive
and expressive language.
21Principles (continued)
- 3. Assessments of youngsters with reading
challenges must include information on literacy
practices in the home. - 4. While we are assessing or working with
children with literacy challenges, counseling
parents (who are literate) regarding the value of
reading to their children, or exposing them to
the value of print, and to literature that is not
too difficult for them can be extremely valuable.
22Principles (continued)
- 5. For children with word decoding weaknesses,
dynamic assessment procedures can be utilized to
determine the efficacy of phonological awareness
training to improve their decoding skill. - (Ultimately, multisensory approaches to
sound-letter correspondences e.g. Orton
Gillingham or Lindamood Phonemic Sequencing have
been found to be most effective for decoding
deficits.)
23Principles (continued)
- 6. Children with reading challenges should be
assessed for a broad range of metalinguistic
skills. - Children with reading comprehension weaknesses
may have deficits in metalexical or metasyntactic
skills. Research has repeatedly demonstrated that
the extent of the childs metalinguisitc skills
will determine and predict the degree of success
he or she will have with literacy tasks.
24- 7. Dynamic assessment procedures must be
implemented to determine whether explicit
teaching strategies are warranted, and, if they
are, what type - (e.g. metaphonological, metalexical,
metasyntactic) - will be effective for the particular child in
question. - 8. Intense, explicit instruction in the area of
need can reduce the liklihood of reading
difficulties.
25Thus,
- Unlike oral language skills, reading skills must
be explicitly taught even to typical learners.
For children with reading challenges, research
findings support the importance of repetition and
exposure to learning strategies in the areas of
need. Depending upon the individual childs
profile, we might be facilitating emergent
literacy skills, or instructing the child in
metalinguistic skills at the sound, word, or
sentence level rather than only addressing
decoding, comprehension, or reading fluency.
26Contemporary research in reading and language has
broadened our view of the key factors that impact
reading success.
- Training in a deficient metalinguistic skill will
ulitmately strengthen measures of reading ability.